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Spatial distribution characteristics and migration of microplastics in surface water, groundwater and sediment in karst areas: The case of Yulong River in Guilin, Southwest China

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 114 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.
Lishan Zhang, Qian Zhang, Qian Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Xiaohua Shu, Qian Zhang, Xiaohua Shu, Lizhen Xu Minghao Yang, Lizhen Xu, Lishan Zhang, Minghao Yang, Qian Zhang, Qian Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Ziqi Qin, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Qian Zhang, Qian Zhang, Qian Zhang, Xiaohua Shu, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Xiaohua Shu, Qian Zhang, Xiaohua Shu, Qian Zhang, Xiaohua Shu, Qian Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Qian Zhang, Lishan Zhang, Lizhen Xu, Lizhen Xu

Summary

Researchers investigated microplastic distribution in surface water, sediment, and groundwater in the karst landscape of the Yulong River in Guilin, China. They found microplastic pollution across all water compartments, with living areas showing the highest contamination and tourism-related disposable plastics identified as a primary source. The study suggests that microplastics reach groundwater through hydraulic exchange with surface water in karst areas rather than through soil infiltration.

Study Type Environmental

Karst regions, due to their unique topography, may be more susceptible to contaminants such as microplastics from other ecosystems. However, few studies reported the occurrence of microplastics in karst areas. Here, we investigated the abundance of microplastics in surface water, sediments and groundwater. In addition, their spatial distribution characteristics and migration were also analyzed in a typical karst area, Yulong River, Guilin, China. Microplastic pollution was found in the sediments, surface water and especially groundwater in Yulong River. The abundance of microplastics was 0-4 items/L, 247-1708 items/kg and 0-4 items/L in surface water, sediments and groundwater, respectively. Microplastics in surface water and groundwater were fiber-based, while those in sediments were fragment-based. Polypropylene (PP), Polystyrene (PS) and Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) are dominant microplastic types in Yulong River. Moreover, the abundance of microplastic pollution in different functional areas ranked as follows: living area > agricultural area > landscape area. Clustering analysis showed that disposable tableware and plastic bags used in tourism activities might be the main source of microplastics. More importantly, our findings suggested that microplastics in groundwater could be the result of hydraulic exchange between groundwater and surface water in karst areas, rather than soil infiltration. These findings provided us with a further understanding of the pollution of microplastics in karst rivers.

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