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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 Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Occurrence and distribution of meso- and macroplastics in the water, sediment, and fauna of the Nile River, Egypt

Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 2023 21 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yasmine A. M. Hassan, Yasmine A. M. Hassan, Yasmine A. M. Hassan, Yasmine A. M. Hassan, Ahmed E. A. Badrey, Alaa G. M. Osman Ahmed E. A. Badrey, Ahmed E. A. Badrey, Ahmed E. A. Badrey, Alaa G. M. Osman Alaa G. M. Osman Alaa G. M. Osman Aldoushy Mahdy, Ahmed E. A. Badrey, Ahmed E. A. Badrey, Alaa G. M. Osman Alaa G. M. Osman Ahmed E. A. Badrey, Aldoushy Mahdy, Aldoushy Mahdy, Alaa G. M. Osman

Summary

Researchers characterized the abundance and distribution of meso- and macroplastics in water, sediment, fish, and crayfish from the Nile River in Upper Egypt, finding plastics throughout all media and at all sites, with the Nagaa Hammadi site having the highest abundance. African catfish had the highest plastic load among the species examined.

Study Type Environmental

The present study described the most recent findings concerning the abundance and distribution of plastic in water, sediment, and fauna in the Nile River of Upper Egypt as an interesting research point. The findings revealed that plastics were abundant in the water, sediments, fish, and crayfish throughout the sites. The Nagaa Hammadi site has the highest abundance of meso- and macroplastics in its water and sediment. African catfish had the highest abundance of meso- and macroplastics compared to the other species, while Nile tilapia had no meso- or macroplastics in its alimentary canal or gills in all sites. The Edfu site has the highest abundance of mesoplastics in the alimentary canals of African catfish, while the Nagaa Hammadi site has the highest abundance of mesoplastics in the gills, and macroplastics appeared only in the alimentary canal of African catfish from the El-wasta site. Only mesoplastics were found in the crayfish's alimentary canal, with the Nagaa Hammadi site having the highest abundance. No macroplastics were detected in the crayfish's gills or alimentary canal. Additionally, this work lets us understand how plastics behave in freshwater environments, and it is a step toward decision-makers taking appropriate measures to reduce their risk.

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