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Plastic recycling plant as a point source of microplastics to sediment and macroinvertebrates in a remote stream

Microplastics and Nanoplastics 2022 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Emilie Kallenbach, Emilie Kallenbach, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Rachel Hurley, Emilie Kallenbach, Emilie Kallenbach, Emilie Kallenbach, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Tor Erik Eriksen, Emilie Kallenbach, Nikolai Friberg Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Nikolai Friberg Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Nikolai Friberg Dean Jacobsen, Dean Jacobsen, Rachel Hurley, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Rachel Hurley, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Nikolai Friberg Emilie Kallenbach, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Emilie Kallenbach, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Rachel Hurley, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Cecilie Singdahl-Larsen, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Rachel Hurley, Tor Erik Eriksen, Rachel Hurley, Nikolai Friberg

Summary

Researchers investigated a plastic recycling plant in a remote area of Norway as a point source of microplastic pollution to an upland stream, collecting approximately 2 kg of sediment and 549 macroinvertebrate individuals and finding elevated polyethylene film-derived microplastic contamination linked to the facility.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

UNLABELLED: Microplastic is now ubiquitous in freshwater, sediment and biota, globally. This is as a consequence of inputs from, for example, waste mismanagement, effluents from wastewater treatment plants and surface runoff from agricultural areas. In this study, we investigated point source pollution of plastic to an upland stream, originating from a recycling plant that recycles polyethylene film in a remote area of Norway. Sediment (~2 kg) and macroinvertebrates (549 individuals in total) were sampled at one site upstream and two sites downstream of the recycling plant to study microplastic deposition and food web uptake. In total, 340 microplastic films were identified through a combination of visual and µFTIR analysis in the sediment samples. This corresponded to a concentration of 0.23 (± 0.057) items per g sediment upstream of the plastic recycling plant and 0.45 (± 0.017) and 0.58 (± 0.34) items per g downstream. The dominant plastic polymer was polyethylene, which increased significantly downstream of the plastic recycling plant. This indicates the role of the plastic recycling plant as a point source for microplastic in this catchment. Among the three sites investigated, a fairly constant concentration of polypropylene was found, indicating a diffuse source of polypropylene films across the catchment possibly relating to low-intensity agricultural land-use. Low levels of polyethylene were also observed upstream, which may be linked to either local or longer-distance atmospheric transport. Despite the considerable presence of microplastic in sediments, concentrations in macroinvertebrates were extremely low with only a single microplastic particle identified in the total of 549 macroinvertebrates-belonging to three different feeding groups-investigated. Our study suggests that: 1) microplastic pollution can be transferred to remote areas as unintended losses from recycling facilities, 2) remote areas with limited land-use pressure still have detectable levels of microplastic and 3) microplastic is only taken up by stream macroinvertebrates to a limited degree despite relatively high sediment concentrations, and thus there are no strong indications for ecological risks posed by microplastic to this ecological group at this location. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s43591-022-00045-z.

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