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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

An innovative approach for microplastic sampling in all surface water bodies using an aquatic drone

Heliyon 2022 30 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Gabriel Pasquier, Périne Doyen, Gabriel Pasquier, Gabriel Pasquier, Gabriel Pasquier, Rachid Amara Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Rachid Amara Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Nicolas Carlési, Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Nicolas Carlési, Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Périne Doyen, Périne Doyen, Rachid Amara Rachid Amara Rachid Amara

Summary

Researchers adapted an aquatic drone to sample microplastics in surface water, finding it produced results comparable to the standard Manta net while offering better reproducibility and improved capture of smaller, lighter particles in both river and coastal environments.

Study Type Environmental

The lack of one standardized method to evaluate microplastic pollution in different aquatic environments worldwide represent a gap to fill for the scientist's community. To help overcome this challenge, we adapted an aquatic drone, named Jellyfishbot®, to sample microplastics. The aquatic drone has been compared with the actual most used method for sampling MPs in surface waters: the Manta net. In order to test the reliability of the aquatic drone in different environments, samples were collected in a river and coastal waters sites. The results obtained with the two methods were similar in term of MPs abundances, shapes and colors. It provides also a better reproducibility and more accurate sampling of MPs located in the surface waters mainly the lighter and smaller ones. This sampling method has the advantage of combining the benefits of Manta net sampling (i.e. a representative surface water sampling method that covers a large sampling area and volume (several tens m) with those of pump filtration and grab sampling (easy access to confined and hard-to-reach areas). This new sampling method could be applied in different aquatic environments making it possible to compare the data and hence become a new standardized approach to evaluate microplastic pollution levels.

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