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Marimo for monitoring and filtering of aquatic environments

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2025
Neil Phillips, Thomas C. Draper, Andrew P. Geary, Kathryn Lamb-Riddell, Kathryn Lamb-Riddell, Darren M. Reynolds, Joshua A. C. Steven, Freya Radford, Abdul Farooq, Andrew Adamatzky

Summary

Researchers investigated Marimo (Aegagropila linnaei) algae spheres as a sustainable tool for water monitoring and filtration, developing a non-destructive extraction method to recover entrapped microplastics, sediments, and indicator species and prototyping a Marimo-based filtration system for freshwater applications.

Study Type Environmental

Aegagropila linnaei (commonly known as "Marimo") forms dense spheres of intertwined algae filaments capable of capturing and retaining a wide range of particles and microorganisms (up to 2 mm in length) from freshwater environments. This study explores the potential of Marimo as a sustainable tool for environmental monitoring and water filtration. We present a novel, non-destructive method for extracting entrapped materials (including microplastics, sediments, and indicator species) and evaluate various analytical techniques for characterising the extracted content. A prototype Marimo-based filtration system was developed, demonstrating significant reductions in microbial contaminants within a recirculating water system. These findings highlight the advantages of using Marimo as a low-cost, eco-friendly solution for long-term aquatic ecosystem monitoring and remediation.

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