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Weathering indices of microplastics along marine and coastal sediments from the harbor of Cartagena (Spain) and its adjoining urban beach

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2022 54 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Javier Bayo, Dolores Rojo, Sonia Olmos

Summary

Microplastics were sampled from marine and coastal sediments at the harbor of Cartagena, Spain, and an adjoining beach, with fibers dominating both environments (48% and 62% respectively) alongside films and fragments. Weathering analysis showed that plastics in the marine sediments were more degraded than those on the beach, indicating longer environmental exposure.

Study Type Environmental

Marine and coastal sediments from the harbor of Cartagena (Spain) and its adjoining beach were investigated regarding their microplastic burden. Fibers accounted for 47.62% and 61.66% in marine and coastal sediments, respectively, followed by films (31.43% and 18.76%) and fragments (20.95% and 18.65%). Polyvinyl (36.07%), polypropylene (21.31%), and polyethylene (18.03%) were isolated for marine sediments, and low-density polyethylene (40.71%), polypropylene (20.16%), and acrylate (11.37%) for coastal sediments. Highest concentrations were found in the deepest marine sediments (24.0 m) and in the furthest zone from the seashore for coastal sediments (18 m). Carbonyl index increased in the intermediate area (12.5 m) for marine sediments (0.51), whilst vinyl index was maximum for the deepest samples (1.94), reporting Norrish type I and II reactions, respectively. Coastal sediments collected close to the high tide line displayed the highest average values for both indices, 1.57 and 1.29, respectively, indicating a higher exposition to weathering variables.

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