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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Spatial Distribution of Microplastic Contamination in Blood Clams (Anadara granosa) on the Jeneponto Coast, South Sulawesi

Pharmacognosy Journal 2023 5 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.
Rachmat Saleh, Rachmat Saleh, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Hasnawati Amqam, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Hasanuddin Ishak, Agus Bintara Birawida Anwar Daud, Agus Bintara Birawida Hasnawati Amqam, Anwar Daud, Hasnawati Amqam, Anwar Daud, Anwar Mallongi, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Anwar Daud, Anwar Mallongi, Agus Bintara Birawida Anwar Mallongi, Anwar Mallongi, Anwar Mallongi, Anwar Mallongi, Hasnawati Amqam, Hasnawati Amqam, Hasanuddin Ishak, Anwar Mallongi, Agus Bintara Birawida Hasnawati Amqam, Atjo Wahyu, Hasnawati Amqam, Anwar Mallongi, Anwar Daud, Hasanuddin Ishak, Hasnawati Amqam, Agus Bintara Birawida Hasnawati Amqam, Atjo Wahyu, Atjo Wahyu, Stang Stang, Stang Stang, Agus Bintara Birawida Agus Bintara Birawida Anwar Mallongi, Anwar Mallongi, Anwar Mallongi, Rachmat Saleh, Rachmat Saleh, Agus Bintara Birawida

Summary

Researchers mapped microplastic contamination in blood clams (Anadara granosa) along the South Sulawesi coast of Indonesia using spatial analysis, linking distribution patterns to local wind and current conditions. The findings document microplastic ingestion in this commercially consumed bivalve and highlight the health implications for coastal communities who eat them.

Study Type Environmental

Plastic waste in oceans will threaten of marine biota. There is a very high degree of plastic pollution in Indonesia, however the distribution of microplastic contamination in seafood, particularly that ingested by the general populace as a daily meal from seas, is quite low. The purpose of this investigation is to map the distribution of microplastic contamination in blood clams (Anadara granosa) throughout the South Sulawesi coast. Observational study employing a spatial analysis exploratory design. Blood clams (Anadara granosa) and information on wind, currents, and tides are used to map the distribution of microplastic pollution. The Kriging model was used for their geographical analysis. Purposive sampling was used to collect a total of 25 samples of blood clams (Anadara granosa) from offshore locations, residential waterways, mangrove ecosystems, rivers, and river estuaries. The results showed that the highest distribution of microplastic contamination was found in mangrove ecosystem areas and residential waters, while the lowest was found in river areas. Blood clams (Anadara granosa) have high levels of microplastic contamination because of sources of plastic pollution that come from waste disposal activities. It became stuck in the fisheries and mangrove ecosystems along the coast. Oceanography has an impact on how currents and winds migrate from the northeast (where mangrove habitats are) to the north (where residential waters are), carrying microplastic particles. Provision of waste management facilities by the local government and using the depuration method to eliminate microplastics in blood clams (Anadara granosa) consumed by the community needs to be done to reduce the impact on ecology and health.

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