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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. Environmental Sources Food & Water Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Role of saltmarsh systems in estuarine trapping of microplastics

Scientific Reports 2022 34 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.
Jessica L. Stead, Jessica L. Stead, Jessica L. Stead, Jessica L. Stead, Jessica L. Stead, Chiedozie C. Ogbuagu, Andrew B. Cundy Jessica L. Stead, Jessica L. Stead, Jessica L. Stead, Jessica L. Stead, Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Jessica L. Stead, Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Hachem Kassem, Andrew B. Cundy Jessica L. Stead, Andrew B. Cundy Jessica L. Stead, Udiba Ugumanim Udiba, Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Jessica L. Stead, Jessica L. Stead, Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Jessica L. Stead, Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy Andrew B. Cundy

Summary

Researchers found that saltmarsh vegetation significantly enhances the trapping of microplastics in estuarine sediments compared to adjacent bare mudflats, suggesting that these coastal ecosystems act as important sinks for plastic pollution under tidal flow conditions.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Saltmarshes are important natural ecosystems along many temperate (and other) coastlines. They stabilize sediments and act as biofilters for a range of industrial pollutants and, potentially, microplastics. Accumulation of microplastics along estuarine coastlines may be enhanced by the presence of saltmarsh species, as they offer better particle trapping efficiency than adjacent intertidal mudflats under prevailing flood and ebb tidal currents. However, the trapping efficiency of entire saltmarsh systems under varying flow conditions has not been widely assessed. While the effects of saltmarsh systems on water flow, and on sediment transport and trapping, have been relatively well studied, little is known about the contributions of saltmarsh halophytes, resident organisms and the associated saltmarsh sediments to the trapping of microplastics. To address this, a series of flume experiments were undertaken to examine transport and accumulation of Bakelite particles (~ 500 µm) and PVC nurdles (~ 5 mm) as model plastics in sub-sampled saltmarsh and intertidal mudflat monoliths. The results showed that saltmarsh systems influenced the hydrodynamics within and above the canopy, enhancing turbulence and shear stresses. With increasing flow velocities (≤ 0.51 m s<sup>-1</sup>), negligible quantities (2 [Formula: see text] 10<sup>-4</sup> mg L<sup>-1</sup>) of sediments and Bakelite particles were eroded and resuspended. The algal biogenic roughness from the mudflat, and the vegetative roughness from the Spartina plants on the saltmarsh, inhibited the transportation of the microplastics within the tested systems. Resident burrowing crabs (Carcinus maenas) promoted the burial, release and transport of microplastics. The results of this study provide evidence of the contributory roles of saltmarsh systems in the sequestration of microplastics and sediment stabilization. Estuarine saltmarsh systems can act as sinks for microplastics with enhanced burial from burrowing crabs under favourable flow conditions.

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