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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Microplastic pollution in urban rivers within China's Danxia landforms: Spatial distribution characteristics, migration, and risk assessment

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 19 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yue Li, Yue Li, Nonglin Zhou, Yue Li, Yinjun Deng, Jiale Zhang Yinjun Deng, Yue Li, Chengrong Hu, Yue Li, Yinjun Deng, Nonglin Zhou, Chengrong Hu, Yinjun Deng, Yue Li, Chengrong Hu, Dan Li, Chengrong Hu, Jiale Zhang Nonglin Zhou, Jiale Zhang

Summary

Researchers surveyed microplastic contamination in surface water, sediment, and groundwater across six cities in China's ecologically fragile Danxia landform region. They found moderate levels of contamination, with urban wastewater and agricultural runoff identified as the primary sources. The study suggests that these unique and ecologically sensitive landscapes face real microplastic pollution risks tied to nearby human activity.

Study Type Environmental

The potential deleterious effects of microplastics on environmental integrity and human health have elicited global attention. Particularly vulnerable to microplastics are Danxia landforms, characterized by their unique topographical features and ecologically fragile milieu. Notwithstanding, empirical studies assessing the prevalence of microplastics in these unique landforms remain strikingly limited. The present investigation comprehensively examined the abundance of microplastics in surface water, sediment, and groundwater across six cities and six counties within the Danxia landforms. Comparative analysis revealed a moderate level of microplastic contamination in the urban rivers of the Danxia region relative to other freshwater rivers. Anthropogenic activities, notably urban wastewater treatment and tourism, emerged as principal contributors to microplastic pollution. Sedimentary microplastics exhibited an accumulative trend from upstream to downstream locations. The risk assessment revealed a high potential ecological risk in counties and a moderate risk in cities. Cluster analysis suggested that groundwater microplastics were a confluence of hydraulic interactions between surface and subsurface waters within the Danxia region. This investigation elucidates the microplastic contamination profile, origins, migratory patterns, and associated risks in Danxia's urban rivers, thereby furnishing scientific underpinning for health and ecological preservation strategies within urbanized Danxia landscapes.

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