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Occurrence and distribution of micro- and mesoplastics in the high-latitude nature reserve, northern China

Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering 2022 32 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Wenwen Gong, Yu Xing, Yu Xing, Lihua Han, Anxiang Lu, Han Qu, Li Xu

Summary

The first microplastic survey of the Liaohe River Nature Reserve in northern China found plastics widespread across all 32 sampling sites, with fibers dominating surface water (91.86%) and diverse polymers including rayon, polyester, and PET identified, likely originating from domestic sewage and aquaculture. Even in protected high-latitude nature reserves, microplastic contamination is pervasive, underscoring that no freshwater ecosystem is shielded from plastic pollution.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics pollution has received growing attention worldwide in recent years. However, data on microplastics in the freshwater environment are still limited, especially in high-latitude nature reserves in Northern China. The first study on microplastic pollution in the Liaohe River Reserve in Northern China is reported here, and mesoplastics were also incorporated. Surface water and sediment samples were collected from 32 sites along the nature reserve. The abundance, type, shape, color, and size of micro- and mesoplastics were measured using density extraction, optical microscopy, and FTIR spectroscopy. The data showed that diverse micro- and mesoplastics were found widespread in the 32 sites, and the average abundance of these plastics was 0.11±0.04 10−2 items/L in surface water and 62.29±54.30 items/kg in sediment. Moreover, 70% and 66% were smaller than 2000 µm in surface water and sediment, respectively. Fiber accounted for 91.86% in surface water and 43.48% in sediment, indicating that the major source of micro- and mesoplastics in the Liaohe River Reserve may be domestic sewage and aquaculture. A total of 16 and 27 polymers were identified in surface water and sediment, respectively, and mostly consisted of rayon, polyester, polystyrene, and poly(ethylene terephthalate). Moreover, both the risk index and the pollution load index demonstrated a low risk of micro- and mesoplastics in surface water and sediment in the Liaohe River Reserve.

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