0
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. Sign in to save

The fate of plastic litter within estuarine compartments: An overview of current knowledge for the transboundary issue to guide future assessments

Environmental Pollution 2021 79 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lara M. Pinheiro, Vanessa Ochi Agostini André R. A. Lima, André R. A. Lima, André R. A. Lima, André R. A. Lima, Lara M. Pinheiro, Lara M. Pinheiro, Lara M. Pinheiro, André R. A. Lima, Lara M. Pinheiro, Lara M. Pinheiro, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Vanessa Ochi Agostini Vanessa Ochi Agostini Raymond D. Ward, Lara M. Pinheiro, André R. A. Lima, André R. A. Lima, André R. A. Lima, Raymond D. Ward, André R. A. Lima, Lara M. Pinheiro, Vanessa Ochi Agostini André R. A. Lima, André R. A. Lima, André R. A. Lima, Vanessa Ochi Agostini André R. A. Lima, Raymond D. Ward, Vanessa Ochi Agostini André R. A. Lima, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Vanessa Ochi Agostini Raymond D. Ward, Raymond D. Ward, Raymond D. Ward, Raymond D. Ward, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Vanessa Ochi Agostini Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Grasiela Lopes Leães Pinho, Vanessa Ochi Agostini Vanessa Ochi Agostini

Summary

Researchers reviewed global knowledge on plastic fate within estuaries and found plastic concentrations reaching thousands of items per cubic meter in water and sediment, while identifying major methodological gaps — particularly that microfibers are consistently undersampled and that studies rarely account for ecological trophic gradients or the physicochemical dynamics driving plastic distribution and bioavailability.

Plastics can enter biogeochemical cycles and thus be found in most ecosystems. Most studies emphasize plastic pollution in oceanic ecosystems even though rivers and estuaries are acknowledged as the main sources of plastics to the oceans. This review detected few studies approaching the transboundary issue, as well as patterns of estuarine gradients in predicting plastic distribution and accumulation in water, sediments, and organisms. Quantities of plastics in estuaries reach up to 45,500 items m in water, 567,000 items m in sediment, and 131 items per individual in the biota. The role of rivers and estuaries in the transport of plastics to the ocean is far from fully understood due to small sample sizes, short-term approaches, sampling techniques that underestimate small plastics, and the use of site-specific sampling rather than covering environmental gradients. Microfibres are the most commonly found plastic type in all environmental matrices but efforts to re-calculate pathways using novel sampling techniques and estimates are incipient. Microplastic availability to estuarine organisms and rising/sinking is determined by polymer characteristics and spatio-temporal fluctuations in physicochemical, biological, and mineralogical factors. Key processes governing plastic contamination along estuarine trophic webs remain unclear, as most studies used "species" as an ecological unit rather than trophic/functional guilds and ontogenetic shifts in feeding behaviour to understand communities and intraspecific relationships, respectively. Efforts to understand contamination at the tissue level and the contribution of biofouling organisms as vectors of contaminants onto plastic surfaces are increasing. In conclusion, rivers and estuaries still require attention with regards to accurate sampling and conclusions. Multivariate analysis and robust models are necessary to predict the fate of micro- and macroplastics in estuarine environments; and the inclusion of the socio-economic aspects in modelling techniques seems to be relevant regarding management approaches.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper