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Comprehensive analysis of spatial distribution of microplastics in Rawal Lake, Pakistan using trawl net and sieve sampling methods

Chemosphere 2022 37 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Angela Capper, Rabia Nousheen, Rabia Nousheen, Rabia Nousheen, Angela Capper, Angela Capper, Rabia Nousheen, Rabia Nousheen, Rabia Nousheen, Daniel Rittschof Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Daniel Rittschof Daniel Rittschof Daniel Rittschof Imran Hashmi, Daniel Rittschof Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Daniel Rittschof Daniel Rittschof Daniel Rittschof Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Imran Hashmi, Angela Capper, Angela Capper, Angela Capper, Angela Capper, Angela Capper, Angela Capper, Daniel Rittschof Daniel Rittschof Angela Capper, Daniel Rittschof Daniel Rittschof Daniel Rittschof Daniel Rittschof

Summary

Researchers conducted a comprehensive spatial analysis of microplastics in Rawal Lake, Pakistan, finding that sampling methodology significantly influences microplastic counts and revealing widespread contamination across tributaries, settlement areas, and fishing zones.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Occurrence of microplastics (MPs) in freshwater environments, particularly reservoir and lakes, is an emerging concern. There are limited studies in Pakistan on microplastic pollution in the lacustrine environments and those that exist do not provide sufficient information on the spatial distribution of MPs in offshore surface water. The aims of this study were to determine microplastic abundance in Rawal Lake, Pakistan and to ascertain if sampling methodology influences microplastic counts. Surface water samples were collected from 10 sites; 5 tributaries, 2 human settlement and 3 fishing and boating areas using two different sampling techniques: 100 μm mesh trawl and 20 L sample through a 45 μm mesh sieve. A significant difference was observed in the abundance of MPs across two methods with the sieve method yielding 2.8 ± 1.44 particles/L and trawl yielding 0.025 ± 0.024 particles/L. Tributaries and boating/fishing area had higher microplastic abundance than the residential area regardless of sampling method. Filaments were the dominant shape of MPs in both type of samples followed by fragments in trawl samples and films in sieved samples. Microbeads were only detected in trawl samples. MPs within size range 0.1-0.9 mm were mostly fragments (82%). MPs were diverse in colors with white/transparent and black MPs common. Polypropylene was the main type of microplastic in Rawal Lake (40-74%). Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) of MPs showed cracks, roughness and striations on the particles. Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy (EDS) detected heavy metals (Fe, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn, Co and Cr) in MPs. Findings suggest that microplastic pollution in Rawal Lake may pose great risk to aquatic and human life through leaching of inherent/adsorbed heavy metals and therefore requires future investigation.

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