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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

Hotspots of microplastic accumulation at the land-sea transition and their spatial heterogeneity: The Po River prodelta (Adriatic Sea)

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 27 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.
Fantina Madricardo, Fantina Madricardo, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Clarissa Raguso, Francesco Saliu, Clarissa Raguso, Clarissa Raguso, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Claudio Pellegrini, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Marina Lasagni Clarissa Raguso, Marzia Rovere, Alessandro Bosman, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Marina Lasagni Clarissa Raguso, Marina Lasagni Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Irene Sammartino, Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Francesco Saliu, Marina Lasagni Francesco Saliu, Alessandro Bosman, Irene Sammartino, Antonio Petrizzo, Clarissa Raguso, Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni M. Clemenza, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Marina Lasagni Clarissa Raguso, Clarissa Raguso, Clarissa Raguso, Claudio Pellegrini, Antonio Petrizzo, Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Antonio Petrizzo, Alessandra Mercorella, Marina Lasagni Francesco Saliu, Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Francesco Saliu, Francesco Saliu, Fabio Trincardi, Daphnie Galvez, Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Francesco Saliu, Fantina Madricardo, Fantina Madricardo, Marina Lasagni Marina Lasagni Antonio Petrizzo, Fantina Madricardo, Fantina Madricardo, Fabio Trincardi, Fantina Madricardo, Francesco Saliu, Marina Lasagni Francesco Saliu, M. Clemenza, Antonio Petrizzo, Fabio Trincardi, Marzia Rovere, Marina Lasagni

Summary

Using multibeam bathymetry, sediment provenance, and microFTIR analysis of a river delta, researchers documented how delta sedimentary systems sequester microplastics after flood events, identifying coastal transition zones as hotspots for plastic accumulation with heterogeneous spatial distribution.

Study Type Environmental

Deltas are the locus of river-borne sediment accumulation, however, their role in sequestering plastic pollutants is still overlooked. By combining geomorphological, sedimentological, and geochemical analyses, which include time-lapse multibeam bathymetry, sediment provenance, and μFT-IR analyses, we investigate the fate of plastic particles after a river flood event providing an unprecedented documentation of the spatial distribution of sediment as well as of microplastics (MPs), including particles fibers, and phthalates (PAEs) abundances in the subaqueous delta. Overall sediments are characterized by an average of 139.7 ± 80 MPs/kg d.w., but display spatial heterogeneity of sediment and MPs accumulation: MPs are absent within the active sandy delta lobe, reflecting dilution by clastic sediment (ca. 1.3 Mm<sup>3</sup>) and sediment bypass. The highest MP concentration (625 MPs/kg d.w.) occurs in the distal reaches of the active lobe where flow energy dissipates. In addition to MPs, cellulosic fibers are relevant (of up to 3800 fibers/kg d.w.) in all the analyzed sediment samples, and dominate (94 %) with respect to synthetic polymers. Statistically significant differences in the relative concentration of fiber fragments ≤0.5 mm in size were highlighted between the active delta lobe and the migrating bedforms in the prodelta. Fibers were found to slightly follow a power law size distribution coherent with a one-dimensional fragmentation model and thus indicating the absence of a size dependent selection mechanism during burial. Multivariate statistical analysis suggests traveling distance and bottom-transport regime as the most relevant factors controlling particle distribution. Our findings suggest that subaqueous prodelta should be considered hot spots for the accumulation of MPs and associated pollutants, albeit the strong lateral heterogeneity in their abundances reflects changes in the relative influence of fluvial and marine processes.

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