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Raining Plastics: Quantification of Atmospheric Deposition of Plastic and Anthropogenic Particles into an Estuary of National Significance with the Assistance of Citizen Scientists

Environments 2025
Linda J. Walters, Madison Serrate, Thomas Blanchard, P Sacks, Fnu Joshua, Lei Zhai

Summary

Researchers quantified atmospheric deposition of microplastics and anthropogenic particles into the Indian River Lagoon (Florida) using passive collectors deployed by citizen scientists across a 145 km2 area, finding deposition rates sufficient to account for a substantial portion of the estimated 1.4 trillion microplastics present in the lagoon's surface waters. The study demonstrates atmospheric deposition as a meaningful pathway for microplastic input to estuarine environments.

Study Type Environmental

Globally, little is known about the dispersal of microplastics (MP) and anthropogenic particles (AP) via atmospheric deposition (AD) into water bodies. Correlating AD to the large number of MP in estuaries is challenging but an important first step toward reducing this form of pollution. A previously published model of the surface waters of the Indian River Lagoon (IRL, east central coast of Florida, USA) estimated it contained 1.4 trillion microplastics. To determine if AD could produce this much plastic deposition, we deployed passive AD collectors throughout a 145 km2 area at three site types with assistance from citizen scientists. We predicted that the rate of deposition of MP and AP would be greatest in residential areas, intermediate within a national park, and lowest on intertidal oyster reefs. Moreover, we predicted Florida’s wet season and individual rain events would increase deposition based on the published literature. Over 14 months, deposition averaged 1224 MP/m2/d; extrapolated, this yields 1.1 trillion MP for the lagoon-wide total deposition estimate (95% CI: 0.86–1.39 trillion MP). This value suggests that AD may represent an important pathway for MP to enter this estuary. More MP were deposited during rain events and in the wet season, with no differences among sites. Overall, our results provide important data for understanding AD of MP and AP in estuaries.

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