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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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Effects of seasonal variation and resuspension on microplastics in river sediments

Environmental Pollution 2021 214 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Feiyang Xia, Quanwei Yao, Quanwei Yao, Dunqiu Wang Feiyang Xia, Dunqiu Wang, Dunqiu Wang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Dunqiu Wang Feiyang Xia, Dunqiu Wang Dunqiu Wang, Dunqiu Wang Jun Zhang, Dunqiu Wang Dunqiu Wang Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Dunqiu Wang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Dunqiu Wang, Dunqiu Wang Dunqiu Wang, Dunqiu Wang, Dunqiu Wang Dunqiu Wang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Dunqiu Wang, Dunqiu Wang Dunqiu Wang Dunqiu Wang, Jun Zhang, Dunqiu Wang, Dunqiu Wang, Dunqiu Wang Dunqiu Wang

Summary

Researchers measured microplastic concentrations in river sediments across multiple seasons and examined the role of resuspension events, finding that MP levels varied significantly by season and that high-flow events released previously deposited particles, redistributing contamination downstream.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Although microplastics are an emerging pollutant of global concern, little is known about the environmental behavior of microplastic in sediments. This study investigated the occurrence and seasonal variation of microplastics in the sediments of Liangfeng River, China with a fluorescence staining method, and then explored the transfer of microplastics at the water and sediment interfaces during resuspension. The results showed that smaller microplastics were detected in the sediments, which were concentrated in the size range of 50-500 μm. Microplastic abundance in the sediments in the dry season were slightly higher than those from the rainy season, and the rainy season promotes the accumulation of smaller microplastics in the sediment along the river-flow direction but not for the dry season. The shape of microplastics were predominantly fibers, followed by fragments and films. Polyethylene was the most abundant polymer, accounting for more than 50% of the total. Microplastics in the surface sediment move both to the overlying water and deeper sediment during the disturbance process. Disturbance-induced resuspension and vertical transport have significant effects on small-sized microplastics (50-500 μm). Small-sized microplastics can potentially migrate and redistribute via resuspension at different temporal and spatial scales, as some extent of resuspension is occurring in most river systems, especially in urban areas with boat traffic.

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