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Spatio-temporal distribution of microplastics in water and sediment samples of the Plankenburg river, Western Cape, South Africa

Environmental Pollution 2023 75 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Conrad Sparks Komlan Apetogbor, Komlan Apetogbor, Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Komlan Apetogbor, Conrad Sparks Komlan Apetogbor, Conrad Sparks Omoniyi Pereao, Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Omoniyi Pereao, Omoniyi Pereao, Omoniyi Pereao, Beatrice Olutoyin Opeolu, Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Omoniyi Pereao, Beatrice Olutoyin Opeolu, Beatrice Olutoyin Opeolu, Beatrice Olutoyin Opeolu, Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks Conrad Sparks

Summary

Researchers monitored microplastic pollution in water and sediment of the Plankenburg River in South Africa across four seasons. The study found that spring had the highest microplastic concentrations in both water and sediment, with fibers being the most common particle type, and polyethylene and polypropylene identified as the dominant polymer types.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastic (MPs) pollution has become a subject of environmental concern due to its wide ubiquity in the environment. Microplastics are possible sources of other hazardous chemicals to aquatic organisms due to their composition and sorption properties. In this study, MPs occurrence in water and sediment samples of the Plankenburg River, Western Cape, South Africa was investigated. The physicochemical characterization of the river water was done onsite. 30 L water samples were collected and filtered in 10 L triplicates through a 250 μm mesh onsite using a metal bucket. An additional 12 L sample was collected and filtered in 4 L triplicates through 20 μm mesh in the laboratory. The extraction of MPs from water in the laboratory was by density separation. Sediment samples were also collected at the selected sites, oven-dried and microplastics in the laboratory. Sampling was conducted over four seasons - spring, summer, autumn, and winter. Microplastics were classified by visual observation and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR-ATR). The seasonal distribution of MPs in the surface water samples varied across all sites. However, spring samples had the highest MPs occurrence (5.13 ± 6.62 MP/L) and the least, in autumn (1.52 ± 2.54 MP/L). The MPs in sediment samples were observed in spring (1587.50 ± 599.32 MP/kg). Fibres were the most dominant microplastic particle type (shape), with a size range of 500-1000 μm at the different sites. The infrared spectroscopic analysis confirmed the dominant polymer type to be polyethylene. This study provides an understanding of the microplastic occurrence in the Plankenburg River system and gives a baseline for future monitoring and assessment of water and sediment in the South African freshwater systems.

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