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Microplastic pollution in sediments of tropical shallow lakes

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 31 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.
Jacqueline Santos Silva-Cavalcanti, Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Jacqueline Santos Silva-Cavalcanti, Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Jayne Crisleny Pereira Silva, Mônica F. Costa Jacqueline Santos Silva-Cavalcanti, Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Jayne Crisleny Pereira Silva, Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Jacqueline Santos Silva-Cavalcanti, Flávio Montenegro de Andrade, Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Andréa Monteiro Santana Silva Brito, Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa Mônica F. Costa

Summary

Researchers found microplastics in all sediment samples from 48 tropical shallow lakes across a climatic gradient, with fibres dominating over fragments and polyester being the most common polymer, indicating widespread plastic contamination even in inland freshwater ecosystems.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Forty-eight tropical shallow lakes (depth ≤ 4 m) across a climatic gradient were assessed for microplastic (MPs; <5 mm) pollution based on MPs concentrations in archive samples from lake shore sediments. The MPs were classified by type (fragments or fibres), colour (yellow, black, red, green, blue, white, and transparent), size (0.55 to 4.93 mm), and polymer (polyester, polyethylene, chlorinated polyethylene, and polyamide). Sediments were predominantly medium sand, and all samples (144) contained MPs, consisting of 24 % fragments (6.3 ± 11.3 MPs·300 g) and 76 % fibres (21.25 ± 12.7 MPs·300 g). The lake climate (humid, transitional, or semi-arid), type of surrounding land use (urban, semi-arid, or rural), and distance from the shoreline (0, 5 or 10 m) did not explain the differences in MPs concentrations, partially refuting the initial hypothesis. The only significant difference was between the sample medians for the number of fragments based on the region (H = 7.586; p = 0.0481). The number of fragments in the lakes in the humid region was greater than that in the semi-arid region (p < 0.05). Poor sanitation, sewage effluents, and solid wastes reaching and accumulating in the lakes may be the primary and transversal conditioning factors for this small difference among diverse environments. Freshwater lakes are investigated in all continents, and the present study contributes to the first record of MPs in shallow lake sediments in eastern South America. The 48 shallow lakes assessed showed a relatively low concentration of MPs compared to other lake contaminants reported in the international literature. This information coincides with public policies issued, regarding the control and reduction of plastics and MPs in Brazil, and the study region.

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