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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 Sign in to save

Sources and distribution of microplastics in the east China sea under a three-dimensional numerical modelling

Environmental Pollution 2022 37 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.
Lu Cao, Lu Cao, Lu Cao, Wei Chen, Yichen Sun, Yichen Sun, Yichen Sun, Lu Cao, Lu Cao, Wei Chen, Yan Li Lu Cao, Lu Cao, Lu Cao, Lu Cao, Lu Cao, Lu Cao, Lu Cao, Yuntao Wang, Yan Li Yuntao Wang, Yan Li Yan Li Wei Chen, Wei Chen, Yan Li Yan Li Yan Li Xizeng Zhao, Yan Li Yan Li Xizeng Zhao, Xizeng Zhao, Xizeng Zhao, Xizeng Zhao, Yan Li Yan Li Yan Li Yan Li Yan Li Yan Li

Summary

Researchers used three-dimensional numerical modeling to investigate the sources and distribution of microplastics in the East China Sea, finding that riverine inputs from major Chinese rivers are the dominant source and that ocean currents drive accumulation patterns near the Zhoushan fishing ground.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics are new pollutants found in various environments; moreover, high concentrations of microplastics have been proved to harm aquatic organisms. To understand the high abundance of microplastics in the East China Sea (ECS), where the Zhoushan fishing ground is located, this study investigated the transportation and spatial distribution of microplastics from the Changjiang River Estuary (CE) to the ECS via three-dimensional numerical modelling. Utilising observations of microplastics at the surface of the ECS and backward particle tracking, three sources of microplastics were identified: the Changjiang River, Hangzhou Bay, and coastal area of Nantong city. Moreover, Southern Korea contributed to the microplastics in ECS. After microplastics are released from these sources, monsoons, currents, the Changjiang plume, and tides cause significant seasonal differences in the hot spots for microplastics in the ECS; moreover, the generation of ocean fronts may promote microplastic accumulation. In addition, the settling characteristics of microplastics were shown to influence their distributions; for example, large amounts of microplastics accumulated at the bottom of the riverbeds. This study enables a more complete assessment of microplastic transport from estuaries to the open sea and provides a spatial and temporal distribution of microplastics at the surface of the ECS.

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