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Ecological Risk Assessment of Microplastics in Luoma Lake and its Connecting Rivers

Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 2026 Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jiaqiang Liu, Yushu Yan, Lu Cui, Zizhen Zhou, Zizhen Zhou, Chao Zhang, Yixin Song, Yue Li, Yue Li, Shuo Zhou

Summary

Researchers systematically investigated microplastic contamination in Luoma Lake and its connecting rivers in China, finding microplastics in all water samples at concentrations ranging from 3.2 to 12.2 particles per liter. The most common microplastics were small particles under 100 micrometers, primarily PET and polyethylene debris and granules. Ecological risk assessments indicated low overall pollution levels but moderate polymer hazard, providing baseline data for drinking water source protection.

Polymers

Microplastics (MPs), an emerging environmental pollutant, have been found in inland waters with increasing frequency, directly affecting human health and ecological security. However, the abundance and contamination risks of MPs in inland waters remain insufficiently understood. This study systematically investigated the occurrence of MPs in the surface layer of Luoma Lake and its inflow/outflow rivers by conducting field sampling. It estimated the environmental risks of MPs using a combination of the pollution load index (PLI), the polymer hazard index (PHI), and the potential ecological risk index (PERI). MPs were found in all samples, ranging from 3.2 to 12.2 particles/L (average 7.1 particles/L). A total of 10 color types were detected, of which white (23.4%) and transparent (21.1%) were the main color types. The most common dimension was below 100 μm (68.5%), while the predominant shapes were debris (37.1%) and granular (35.3%). The prevalent polymers were terephthalate polyethylene (PET, 34.1%) and polyethylene (PE, 27.5%). Based on PLI, PHI and PERI analysis, the Luoma lake and its inflow/outflow rivers exhibited a low MPs pollution load (level I), a middle polymer hazard (level II), and a low potential ecological risk level (level I), respectively. The findings improve understanding of the ecological risks of MPs pollution in Luoma lake, providing basic data and technique reference for the MPs pollution control and the protection of drinking-water sources.

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