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Meta Analysis ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 1 ? Systematic review or meta-analysis. Synthesizes findings across many studies. Strongest evidence. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Microplastics in aquatic ecosystems of Africa: A comprehensive review and meta-analysis

Environmental Research 2024 38 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Muthii Patrick Nyaga, Donia M. Osman, Donia M. Osman, Soha Shabaka, Weihong Zhang, Weihong Zhang, Muthii Patrick Nyaga, Weihong Zhang, Donia M. Osman, Wenke Yuan Yuyi Yang, Soha Shabaka, Wenke Yuan Yuyi Yang, Soha Shabaka, Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan Wenke Yuan Wenke Yuan Weihong Zhang, Soha Shabaka, Soha Shabaka, Donia M. Osman, Wenke Yuan Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan Weihong Zhang, Weihong Zhang, Muthii Patrick Nyaga, Muthii Patrick Nyaga, Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan Weihong Zhang, Wenke Yuan Wenke Yuan Wenke Yuan Soha Shabaka, Soha Shabaka, Wenke Yuan Yuyi Yang, Seungdae Oh, Soha Shabaka, Soha Shabaka, Muthii Patrick Nyaga, Weihong Zhang, Donia M. Osman, Soha Shabaka, Soha Shabaka, Donia M. Osman, Muthii Patrick Nyaga, Seungdae Oh, Wenke Yuan Wenke Yuan Yuyi Yang, Soha Shabaka, Soha Shabaka, Soha Shabaka, Yuyi Yang, Donia M. Osman, Weihong Zhang, Muthii Patrick Nyaga, Donia M. Osman, Muthii Patrick Nyaga, Weihong Zhang, Wenke Yuan Wenke Yuan Yuyi Yang, Soha Shabaka, Wenke Yuan Wenke Yuan Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Seungdae Oh, Yuyi Yang, Seungdae Oh, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Seungdae Oh, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Weihong Zhang, Weihong Zhang, Soha Shabaka, Soha Shabaka, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Weihong Zhang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan Soha Shabaka, Soha Shabaka, Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan

Summary

This meta-analysis integrating data from 75 studies found that African aquatic ecosystems are highly contaminated with microplastics compared to global averages, with fibers and fragments being the most prevalent shapes. Sampling methods significantly affect reported abundance, and the environmental risk assessment revealed that polyethylene and polypropylene are the dominant polymer types across African rivers, lakes, and oceans.

Study Type Review

Microplastic pollution is a global issue of great public concern. Africa is flagged to host some of the most polluted water bodies globally, but there is no enough information on the extent of microplastic contamination and the potential risks of microplastic pollution in African aquatic ecosystems. This meta-analysis has integrated data from published articles about microplastic pollution in African aquatic ecosystems. The data on the microplastic distribution and morphological characteristics in water, sediments and biota from African rivers, lakes, oceans and seas were extracted from 75 selected studies. Multivariate statistics were used to critically analyze the effects of sampling and detection methods, ecological risks, spatial distribution and similarity of microplastics in relation to the geographical distance between sampling sites. This study found that sampling methods have significant effect on abundance and morphological characteristics of microplastics and that African aquatic ecosystems are highly contaminated with microplastics compared to global data. The most prevalent colors were white, transparent and black, the most prevalent shapes were fibres and fragments, and the most available polymers were polypropylene (PP), polystyrene (PS) and polyethene terephthalate (PET). Microplastic polymers similarity decreased with an increase in geographical distance between sites. Risk levels of microplastics in African aquatic ecosystems were comparatively high, and more than 40 % of water and sediments showed highest level of ecological risk. This review provides recent information on the prevalence, distribution and risks of microplastics in African aquatic ecosystems.

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