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Effects of cascade dams on the occurrence and distribution of microplastics in surface sediments of Wujiang river basin, Southwestern China

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2022 24 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.
Fengxue Wu, Kangkang He, Fengxue Wu, Fengxue Wu, Fengxue Wu, Fengxue Wu, Fengxue Wu, Jingfu Wang, Jingfu Wang, Jingfu Wang, Jingfu Wang, Jingfu Wang, Xiaohong Yang Xiaohong Yang Fengxue Wu, Quan Chen, Fengxue Wu, Fengxue Wu, Fengxue Wu, Xiaohong Yang Xiaohong Yang, Jingan Chen, Quan Chen, Jingan Chen, Jingan Chen, Jingan Chen, Jingan Chen, Quan Chen, Xiaohong Yang Xiaohong Yang Xiaohong Yang Xiaohong Yang Xiaohong Yang Xiaohong Yang

Summary

Researchers analyzed microplastic distribution in sediments of the Wujiang River basin in southwest China, finding that cascade dams trap and accumulate microplastics in reservoir sediments, with dam density and upstream land use significantly influencing local microplastic abundance and composition.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The influence of cascade dams on the migration of microplastics (MPs) was conducted by analyzing the spatial distribution of MPs in sediments of the Wujiang river basin (Wujiang river basin) in Southwest China. The results showed that the abundance of MPs in Wujiang river basin sediments ranged from 310 to 2620 items/kg dw (mean: 1354 items/kg dw, a high level compared with aquatic sediments worldwide). The main chemical components of these MPs were polypropylene and polyethylene. High abundance of MPs in tributary sediments suggested that tributary inputs contributed to the main stream and reservoirs. Statistical analysis showed that gross domestic product (GDP) and the basin area of cascade reservoirs, rather than hydraulic retention time and reservoir age, were the dominating factors in the distribution of MPs in the Wujiang river basin. The accumulation of MPs in cascade reservoirs implied the interception effect of cascade dams. The rapid development of cascade dam systems and the interception effect of dams should be taken into account when predicting the flux of MPs from rivers to the ocean. Heavy metals found on the surface of the MPs showed the compound pollution of MPs and heavy metals in dammed rivers and cascade reservoirs. Our results deepen the understanding of the migration of MPs in rivers alongside intensive cascade hydropower development.

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