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Inter-event and intra-event dynamics of microplastic emissions in an urban river during rainfall episodes

Environmental Research 2023 33 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sachithra Imbulana, Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Ibukun Oluwoye, Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Ibukun Oluwoye, Sachithra Imbulana, Shuhei Tanaka Sachithra Imbulana, Ibukun Oluwoye, Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka A Moríya, Ibukun Oluwoye, A Moríya, Shuhei Tanaka Ibukun Oluwoye, Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Ibukun Oluwoye, Ibukun Oluwoye, Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Sachithra Imbulana, Shuhei Tanaka Ibukun Oluwoye, Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka Shuhei Tanaka

Summary

Researchers conducted high-frequency sampling of microplastics in a Japanese urban river during three different rainfall events to understand how storms mobilize plastic pollution. They found that rainfall events increased microplastic loads by 4 to 110 times compared to dry weather, with smaller particles mobilizing first during lighter rains and larger particles surging after peak rainfall intensity. The study reveals that storm dynamics play a critical role in determining when and how microplastics are flushed from urban areas into waterways.

Study Type Environmental

Urban rivers represent the major conduits for land-sourced microplastics in the global oceans, yet the real-time dynamics of their emissions in rivers during rainfall (and runoff) events are poorly understood. Herein, we report the results of high-frequency sampling of microplastic particles (MPs) and fibers (MPFs) in the surface water of an urban river in Japan over the course of three rainfall events (i.e., light, moderate, and heavy rainfalls). The event mean concentrations (EMCs) of MPs amounted to 35,000 items/m, 929,000 items/m, and 331,000 items/m; and the corresponding total loads were 0.5 kg, 19.8 kg, and 35.0 kg for light, moderate and heavy rainfalls, respectively. The inter-event total loads of MPs correlate well with the total rainfall, while the concentrations were linked with the number of antecedent dry days. The dynamic trends show that <2000 μm MPs displayed first flush effects during light to moderate rainfall events (>50% mass discharged with the initial 20-40% of flow). Small-sized MPs (10-40 μm) mobilized rapidly at lower rainfall intensities, whereas MPs over 2000 μm discharged immediately after the peak rainfall intensity. Moreover, <70 μm MPs depicted a surge following heavy rainfall events due to turbulent flow conditions reverting the deposited MPs into suspension. Overall, the three events increased the loads by 4-110 folds, and EMCs by 10-350 folds compared to the concentrations during dry weather while portraying a significant impact on 300-1000 μm MPs. The dynamics of MPs were correlated with those of suspended solids in river water, and the characteristics were comparable to the same of road dust sampled in Japan. Although the dynamic trends between MPs and MPFs in river water were comparable, MPFs were relatively less impacted by rain, likely due to the intervention of separate sewer systems in the study area.

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