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Are sediment textural parameters an “influencer” of microplastics presence in beach environments?

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2022 17 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.
Nelson Rangel-Buitrago, Rubén Darío Beltrán Rodríguez, Jose Brito Moreno, Felipe Lamus Ochoa, William J. Neal

Summary

Researchers investigated whether sediment textural parameters such as grain size, sorting, skewness, and kurtosis influence the presence and abundance of microplastics at 15 sampling sites along Colombia's Central Caribbean Coast. The study examined relationships between sediment granulometric properties and microplastic typology, magnitudes, shapes, and distribution patterns to identify potential sediment-driven accumulation mechanisms.

Study Type Environmental

Diverse litter studies on Colombia's Central Caribbean Coast have presented the Microplastic issues regarding typology, magnitudes, and distribution. No studies have examined MPs' presence and abundances in relation to sediment grain size and the sediments statistical parameters (mean, median, sorting, skewness, kurtosis). This work attempts to fill this information gap in a study of 15 sampling sites along Colombia's Central Caribbean Coast. Sediment samples were collected and analysed to determine sediment granulometric properties, in association with the presence, magnitudes, shapes, and impact of MPs, and their possible relationships. Within the study area, grain size distribution was similar between surveyed sites, with a dominance of three textural groups: sands, slightly gravelly sands, and slightly gravelly muddy sands. In terms of size-sorting categories, the percentages were moderately well sorted (60 %), moderately sorted (20 %), well sorted (13 %), and very well sorted (7 %). Microplastic abundances (densities) ranged from 160 to 1120 MPs/kg, similar to other global beaches. Microplastic fibers were the dominant typology at 86.8 % of the combined beaches total. Multiple linear regression analysis suggested that approximately 30 % of the MPs' presence could be related to changes in the five sediment statistics used in this work, being the most important statistical parameter sorting with 11 % (r = 0.27 - F-Statistic = 0.67). To manage the MP issue, reducing the current elevated plastic inputs into the environment is necessary/mandatory. Approaches to reach this goal must be focused on the entire plastic life cycle (extraction, design, production, use, disposal, recovery, recycling).

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