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Bypass of Booming Inputs of Urban and Sludge-Derived Microplastics in a Large Nordic Lake

Environmental Science & Technology 2021 63 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
François Clayer, Morten Jartun, Nina Buenaventura, José-Luis Guerrero, Amy Lusher

Summary

Despite large inputs of microplastics from urban runoff and treated sludge, a large Nordic lake showed relatively low microplastic concentrations, suggesting effective dilution or sedimentation processes that bypass surface water accumulation.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastic research, initially focusing on marine environments, left freshwater ecosystems largely unexplored. Freshwaters are also vulnerable to microplastics and are likely the largest microplastic supplier to the ocean. However, microplastic sources, transport pathways, and fluxes at the catchment level remain to be quantified, compromising efficient actions toward mitigation and remediation. Here we show that 70-90% of microplastics reaching Norway's largest lake, originating primarily from urban waste mismanagement and sludge application on crops, continue their journey toward the ocean without being buried. Indeed, our microplastic budget for the catchment shows that out of the 35.9 tons (7.4-119.4 t) of microplastics annually released into the lake, only 3.5 tons (1.3-8.8 t) are settling to the lake bottom. The spatial and vertical microplastic distribution and diversity in lake sediments, the socio-economic modeling of plastic fluxes and spatial information on land use and potential plastic sources all point toward urban and agricultural areas as emission hotspots of increasing importance. We conclude that the degree to which lake sediments represent a net microplastic sink is likely influenced by the nature of microplastics the lake receives, and ultimately on their origin.

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