0
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 Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

The quest for the missing plastics: Large uncertainties in river plastic export into the sea

2022 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Caspar T. J. Roebroek, Caspar T. J. Roebroek, Caspar T. J. Roebroek, Caspar T. J. Roebroek, Caspar T. J. Roebroek, Caspar T. J. Roebroek, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Caspar T. J. Roebroek, Caspar T. J. Roebroek, Caspar T. J. Roebroek, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Charlotte Laufkötter, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Charlotte Laufkötter, Tim van Emmerik Charlotte Laufkötter, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Charlotte Laufkötter, Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Charlotte Laufkötter, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Charlotte Laufkötter, Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Charlotte Laufkötter, Charlotte Laufkötter, Charlotte Laufkötter, Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Charlotte Laufkötter, Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Charlotte Laufkötter, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Charlotte Laufkötter, Charlotte Laufkötter, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Daniel González‐Fernández, Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik Tim van Emmerik

Summary

Researchers reviewed modeling approaches for estimating river plastic transport to the ocean, identifying large discrepancies between modeled export quantities and observed ocean plastic concentrations. The study highlights major uncertainties in current models stemming from limited observational data and calls for improved monitoring to resolve the 'missing plastics' problem.

Study Type Environmental

Plastic pollution in the natural environment is causing increasing concern at both the local and global scale. Understanding the dispersion of plastic through the environment is of key importance for the effective implementation of preventive measures and cleanup strategies. Over the past few years, various models have been developed to estimate the transport of plastics in rivers, using limited plastic observations in river systems. However, there is a large discrepancy between the amount of plastic being modelled to leave the river systems, and the amount of plastic that has been found in the seas and oceans. Here, we investigate one of the possible causes of this mismatch by performing an extensive uncertainty analysis of the riverine plastic export estimates. We examine the uncertainty from the homogenisation of observations, model parameter uncertainty, and underlying assumptions in models. To this end, we use the to-date most complete time-series of macroplastic observations (macroplastics have been found to contain most of the plastic mass transported by rivers), coming from three European rivers. The results show that model structure and parameter uncertainty causes up to four orders of magnitude, while the homogenisation of plastic observations introduces an additional three orders of magnitude uncertainty in the estimates.Additionally, most global models assume that variations in the plastic flux are primarily driven by river discharge. However, we show that correlations between river discharge (and other environmental drivers) and the plastic flux are never above 0.5, and strongly vary between catchments. Overall, we conclude that the yearly plastic load in rivers remains poorly constrained.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper