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Emission, Transport, and Deposition of visible Plastics in an Estuary and the Baltic Sea—a Monitoring and Modeling Approach

Environmental Management 2021 35 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.
Gerald Schernewski, Sarah Piehl, Sarah Piehl, Sarah Piehl, Sarah Piehl, Sarah Piehl, Rahel Hauk, Rahel Hauk, Gerald Schernewski, Matthias Labrenz Gerald Schernewski, Gerald Schernewski, Mirco Haseler, Gerald Schernewski, Gerald Schernewski, Hagen Radtke, Rahel Hauk, Matthias Labrenz Mirco Haseler, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Rahel Hauk, Rahel Hauk, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Rahel Hauk, Matthias Labrenz Hagen Radtke, Esther Robbe, Hagen Radtke, Sarah Piehl, Matthias Labrenz Sarah Piehl, Rahel Hauk, Matthias Labrenz Sarah Piehl, Sarah Piehl, Esther Robbe, Rahel Hauk, Rahel Hauk, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Gerald Schernewski, Mirco Haseler, Esther Robbe, Sarah Piehl, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Sarah Piehl, Gerald Schernewski, Rahel Hauk, Rahel Hauk, Rahel Hauk, Mirco Haseler, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Sarah Piehl, Matthias Labrenz Mirco Haseler, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Rahel Hauk, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Mirco Haseler, Mirco Haseler, Hagen Radtke, Hagen Radtke, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Rahel Hauk, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Lisa Meyer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Lisa Meyer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Mirco Haseler, Rahel Hauk, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Mirco Haseler, Esther Robbe, Gerald Schernewski, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Sarah Piehl, Sarah Piehl, Sarah Piehl, Mirco Haseler, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Joana Riedel, Joana Riedel, Gerald Schernewski, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Gerald Schernewski, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Gerald Schernewski, Hagen Radtke, Matthias Labrenz Rahel Hauk, Gerald Schernewski, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Lisa Meyer, Lisa Meyer, Matthias Labrenz Gerald Schernewski, Matthias Labrenz

Summary

Researchers combined field monitoring and computer modeling to track how large micro- and mesoplastics (1–25 mm) travel from a German city through a river estuary and into the Baltic Sea, finding that estuaries and nearby beaches are major accumulation hotspots. The study shows that visible plastic particles are useful for modeling large-scale transport patterns, but cannot serve as reliable indicators for the far more abundant smaller microplastics below 1 mm.

was to assess whether a comprehensive approach linking existing knowledge with monitoring and modeling can provide an improved insight into coastal and marine plastics pollution. We focused on large micro- and mesoplastic (1-25 mm) and selected macroplastic items. Emission calculations, samplings in the Warnow river and estuary (water body and bottom sediments) and a flood accumulation zone monitoring served as basis for model simulations on transport and behavior in the entire Baltic Sea. Considered were the most important pathways, sewage overflow and stormwater. The coastline monitoring together with calculations allowed estimating plastics emissions for Rostock city and the Warnow catchment. Average concentrations at the Warnow river mouth were 0.016 particles/m³ and in the estuary 0.14 particles/m³ (300 µm net). The estuary and nearby Baltic Sea beaches were hot-spots for plastic accumulation with 6-31 particles/m². With increasing distance from the estuary, the concentrations dropped to 0.3 particles/m². This spatial pattern, the plastic pollution gradients and the observed annual accumulation values were consistent with the model results. Indicator items for sewer overflow and stormwater emissions exist, but were only found at low numbers in the environment. The considered visible plastics alone can hardly serve as indicator for microplastic pollution (<1 mm). The use of up-scaled emission data as input for Baltic Sea model simulations provided information on large scale emission, transport and deposition patterns of visible plastics. The results underline the importance of plastic retention in rivers and estuaries.

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