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Following the fate of microplastic in four abiotic and biotic matrices along the Ticino River (North Italy)

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 48 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Andrea Masseroni, Andrea Masseroni, Paolo Tremolada, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Paolo Tremolada, Anna Winkler, Andrea Masseroni, Andrea Masseroni, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Diego Antonioli, Andrea Masseroni, Anna Winkler, Diego Antonioli, Anna Winkler, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Andrea Masseroni, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Diego Antonioli, Diego Antonioli, Diego Antonioli, Riccardo Chiarcos, Riccardo Chiarcos, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Michele Laus Paolo Tremolada, Riccardo Chiarcos, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Michele Laus Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Diego Antonioli, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Riccardo Chiarcos, Riccardo Chiarcos, Michele Laus Paolo Tremolada, Michele Laus

Summary

Microplastics were tracked across water, sediment, invertebrates, and fish along the length of the Ticino River in northern Italy, providing the first multi-matrix assessment of plastic contamination along this river. The study found increasing concentrations downstream and showed that all sampled biological matrices contained microplastics, confirming systemic contamination throughout the river ecosystem.

Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) are emerging contaminants in freshwater systems that have already attracted much scientific interest, but little attention has been paid to a multi-matrix analysis of MP occurrences along the length of a river. The present research provides the first record of MP contamination of four abiotic and biotic matrices from a river ecosystem simultaneously analysed. MPs were isolated and identified by micro-Fourier Transform Infrared (μ-FTIR) spectroscopy from samples collected along the Ticino River in North Italy during spring 2019. Abiotic samples were surface water (n = 18, 33 MPs m) and sediment (n = 18, 11 MPs kg), while biological samples consisted of stomach and gut content of fish (n = 18, wels catfish, Silurus glanis, 0.032 MPs g) and macroinvertebrates (n = 90, caddisfly larvae, Hydropsychidae, 0.03 MPs mg). MPs were found in biota from all stations; 44% of fish and 61% of macroinvertebrate samples contained MPs. The calculated unit-consistent concentration ratios indicate that both S. glanis and Hydropsychidae larvae had a consistent higher amount of MPs than their respective medium (sediment and water), strongly suggesting an efficient uptake pathway into organisms. MP levels in surface water, sediment, fish and macroinvertebrates were not correlated and did not increase with the river's length. From our mass balance calculations, the Ticino River transports a consistent amount of MP (yearly load of 3.40 × 10 ± 1.1 × 10 MPs) to the Po River. This MP load was almost half than an estimated MP load from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). On that basis and supported by the finding that MP concentration in sediment was mostly opposed to that in surface water but was on average 750-fold higher compared to the water matrix, we surmise that the complex hydrological network of the Ticino River retains a consistent amount of MPs which might build up over time.

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