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Rapid urbanization affects microplastic communities in lake sediments: A case study of Lake Aha in southwest China

Journal of Environmental Management 2023 43 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Li Xu, Ke Guo, Ke Guo, Meixue Peng, Shilin Gao, Shilin Gao, Meixue Peng, Qixin Wu, Qixin Wu, Qixin Wu, Qixin Wu, Qixin Wu, Meixue Peng, Meixue Peng, Meixue Peng, Shilin Gao, Shilin Gao, Meixue Peng, Meixue Peng, Meixue Peng, Jie Zeng, Shilin Gao, Yunjun Ruan, Jie Zeng, Qixin Wu, Qixin Wu, Jie Zeng, Tingting Jiang, Ke Guo, Yunjun Ruan, Yunjun Ruan, Li Xu, Jie Zeng, Ke Guo Jie Zeng, Li Xu, Li Xu, Li Xu, Ke Guo, Ke Guo

Summary

Researchers investigated how rapid urbanization affects microplastic communities in Lake Aha sediments in southwest China, using sediment core slicing to reveal that urbanization significantly increased microplastic abundance and altered polymer composition over time.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Effective management of pollutants in urban environments is crucial for achieving sustainable cities. Microplastics, as an emerging pollutant widely present in contemporary environments, have received widespread attention in recent years. However, limited studies have reported the impact of rapid urbanization on regional microplastics. In this study, the abundance and composition of microplastic communities in the sediments of Lake Aha were analyzed using a "microplastic community" and slicing the sediments at 5 cm intervals. Results showed that microplastic abundance of sediments in Lake Aha was relatively high (up to 1700 items/kg) and decreased with increasing depth, with the highest abundance found in the surface layer (0-5 cm, 1090 ± 474 items/kg). Hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA), principal component analysis (PCA), and analysis of similarities (ANOSIM) revealed that the different sediment layers could be classified into high and low urbanization level groups based on the composition of microplastic communities. Linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) indicated that agricultural input was the main source of microplastic pollution during low urbanization levels, characterized by low abundance, large particle size, and high fiber proportion, while urban activities dominated during high urbanization levels, with high abundance, small particle size, high proportion of Polyethylene terephthalate (PET), fragments, and granules, and colorful microplastics. This study clarifies the impact of urbanization on the abundance and composition of microplastics in lake sediments, which has implications for more effective management and control of microplastic pollution in regions undergoing rapid urbanization.

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