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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Microplastics in Surface Sediments along the Montenegrin Coast, Adriatic Sea: Types, Occurrence, and Distribution

Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 2021 22 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.
Neda Bošković, Neda Bošković, Neda Bošković, Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Neda Bošković, Neda Bošković, Neda Bošković, Neda Bošković, Ana Perošević-Bajčeta, Danijela Joksimović, Danijela Joksimović, Danijela Joksimović, Danijela Joksimović, Neda Bošković, Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Milica Peković, Danijela Joksimović, Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Milica Peković, Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Ana Perošević-Bajčeta, Milica Peković, Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Ana Perošević-Bajčeta, Milica Peković, Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Danijela Joksimović, Oliver Bajt Oliver Bajt Danijela Joksimović, Oliver Bajt

Summary

This is the first study to document microplastics in surface sediments along the coast of Montenegro in the Adriatic Sea. Fibers and fragments were the dominant types found, highlighting that microplastic contamination has reached this less-studied part of the Mediterranean.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Considering that microplastics are widespread in the marine environment, in this study we evaluated the presence, identify distribution, abundance, shape type, and color of microplastics in surface sediment along the Montenegrin coast, on the Adriatic Sea. These preliminary results provide the first published record of microplastics found in the surface sediment of this area and highlight the importance of microplastics as a component of marine debris. We documented the presence of microplastics at all sampling locations. The identification of polymer types was performed using Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, whereby the presence of three polymer types became evident: polypropylene (54.5%), polyethylene (9.7%), and acrylate copolymer (2.0%). Another 22.2% of particles were unidentified polymers, and the remaining 11.5% were non-synthetic materials. The most common shape type of microplastics was filaments (55.5%), followed by granules (26.3%), fragments (14.9%), and films (3.3%). The dominant colors of microplastics followed the order: blue > yellow > red > clear > black > green > blue-white > white. The average abundance of microplastics in all sampling locations was 609 pieces of microplastic/kg of dry sediment. Compared with other studies, the surface sediment of the Montenegrin coast is moderately to highly polluted with microplastics, depending on the examined location.

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