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A spatial and temporal assessment of microplastics in seafloor sediments: A case study for the UK

Frontiers in Marine Science 2023 31 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.
Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Briony Silburn, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Denise Doran, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Denise Doran, Briony Silburn, Jon Barry, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Thomas Maes, Simeon Archer-Rand, Thomas Maes, Simeon Archer-Rand, Thomas Maes, Briony Silburn, Jon Barry, Briony Silburn, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Jon Barry, Jon Barry, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Josie Russell, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Josie Russell, Briony Silburn, Briony Silburn, Josie Russell, Josie Russell, Josie Russell, Josie Russell, Adil Bakir, E.E. Manuel Nicolaus Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Simeon Archer-Rand, E.E. Manuel Nicolaus Jon Barry, Adil Bakir, Josie Russell, Josie Russell, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Simeon Archer-Rand, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Jon Barry, Jon Barry, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Adil Bakir, Josie Russell, Josie Russell, Briony Silburn, Thomas Maes, Adil Bakir, Caroline Limpenny, Thomas Maes, Caroline Limpenny, Claire Mason, Thomas Maes, Denise Doran, Denise Doran, Claire Mason, Jonathan L. Barber, Denise Doran, E.E. Manuel Nicolaus Claire Mason, Thomas Maes, Denise Doran, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, Thomas Maes, E.E. Manuel Nicolaus

Summary

This study assessed microplastic occurrence and abundance in UK seafloor sediments across spatial and temporal scales, supporting the development of common monitoring indicators for regional marine frameworks like OSPAR.

Study Type Environmental

Seafloor sediments have been defined as sinks for microplastics in the marine environment and could therefore represent suitable matrices for their long-term monitoring. On a regional aspect, the adoption of a common indicator for microplastics in seafloor sediments would allow regional monitoring and assessments through international frameworks such as OSPAR. This study presents the findings of a research and development project monitoring the occurrence and abundance of microplastics in UK seafloor sediments for the period 2013-2021, supporting the development of a national monitoring programme for microplastics in seafloor sediments for the UK (England and Wales). A fast-screening technique based on Nile Red staining of polymers coupled with µ-FTIR was applied and validated using µ-FTIR-FPA. Microplastic particles were detected in all 189 sediment samples from 15 stations selected around the UK for each investigated year (2013 - 2021). Microplastic concentrations (20 – 5000 µm) ranged from 133 – 6,933 particles kg -1 dry weight sediment for 2020-2021. Microplastics mainly consisted of fragments (73%), fibres (19%) and spheres (8%). Plastic fragments ranged from 46 to 3276 µm and plastic fibres from 300 to 1731 µm in length with a mean diameter of 16 µm. Single particle analysis using µ-FTIR indicated a prevalence of Rayon, PP, Rayon/Nylon/Polyester blends, Rubber, PS, PE, PA, PVC, Acrylic, EMAA and PET. Fragments were mainly white in colour (46%) followed by brown (38%), black (1%), blue (1%) and orange (1%). Fibres were mainly white in colour (57%) followed by black (14%), orange (14%) and red (14%). A trend assessment at the UK regional seas levels indicated little visual evidence of any trends in the abundance of microplastics over time in any of the regional seas – with the possible exception of the Northern North Sea with a reduction in abundance over time for the time-period 2013-2021.

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