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First insight into microplastic groundwater pollution in Latin America: the case of a coastal aquifer in Northwest Mexico

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2023 59 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
José R. Rivera-Hernández, Daniela Alvarado-Zambrano, Carlos Green-Ruíz Carlos Green-Ruíz Daniela Alvarado-Zambrano, Daniela Alvarado-Zambrano, José R. Rivera-Hernández, José R. Rivera-Hernández, José R. Rivera-Hernández, Carlos Green-Ruíz José R. Rivera-Hernández, José R. Rivera-Hernández, José R. Rivera-Hernández, Carlos Green-Ruíz José R. Rivera-Hernández, Carlos Green-Ruíz José R. Rivera-Hernández, José R. Rivera-Hernández, Carlos Green-Ruíz José R. Rivera-Hernández, José R. Rivera-Hernández, Carlos Green-Ruíz José R. Rivera-Hernández, Carlos Green-Ruíz

Summary

This is the first study to investigate microplastic contamination in groundwater in Latin America, examining a coastal aquifer in Northwest Mexico. Researchers found microplastics at all six sampled locations and at multiple depths, confirming that groundwater is not immune to this type of pollution. Since millions of people depend on groundwater for drinking water, these findings raise important questions about microplastic exposure through water supplies.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics have been studied on biota and other environmental domains, such as soils. Despite the importance of groundwater as a resource for millions of people worldwide as drinking water and personal hygiene, domestic, agricultural, mining, and industrial purposes, there are very few studies concerning microplastics in this domain around the world. We present the first study in Latin America addressing this topic. Six capped boreholes were analyzed in terms of abundance, concentration, and chemical characterization, at three different depths, from a coastal aquifer in Northwest Mexico. This aquifer is highly permeable and affected by anthropogenic activities. A total of 330 microplastics were found in the eighteen samples. In terms of concentration, the interval ranged from 10 to 34 particles/L, with an average of 18.3 particles/L. Four synthetic polymers were identified: isotactic polypropylene (iPP), hydroxyethylcellulose (HEC), carboxylated polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and low-density polyethylene (LDPE); with iPP being the most abundant (55.8%) in each borehole. Agriculture activities and septic outflows are considered the potential regional sources of these contaminants into the aquifer. Three possible transport pathways to the aquifer are suggested: (1) marine intrusion, (2) marsh intrusion, and (3) infiltration through the soil. More research about the occurrence, concentration, and distribution of the different kinds of microplastics in groundwater is needed to have a better understanding of the behavior and health risks to organisms, including human beings.

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