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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 Sign in to save

Microplastics contamination in the surface water of the Yangtze River from upstream to estuary based on different sampling methods

Environmental Research 2021 130 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.
Da He, Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Xiaojuan Chen, Da He, Nan Wu Zhao Wang, Nan Wu Nan Wu Dewang Li, Zhengqiang Zhu, Zhengqiang Zhu, Xiujuan Qi, Xiujuan Qi, Nan Wu Nan Wu Lianfeng Zhou, Lianfeng Zhou, Wei Chen, Chengyan Wan, Chengyan Wan, Dewang Li, Dewang Li, Xi Zou, Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu

Summary

A survey of microplastic contamination along the Yangtze River from source to estuary found average abundances of up to 4.25 × 10^5 items/km by trawling and up to 3,089 items/m³ by filtration, with the Three Gorges Reservoir showing the highest concentrations due to a dam barrier effect.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

In this study, we investigated microplastic contamination of the Yangtze River from the upper reaches to the estuary using different sampling methods to understand extensive information on microplastic pollution. The microplastic samples were collected at 10 sites using two conventional methods: trawling and filtering water. The results showed that the average abundance of microplastics ranged from 1.62±0.61 × 10 to 4.25±3.87 × 10 items/km (trawling samples) and 800.0±300.0 to 3088.9±330.6 items/m (filtering water samples). The average abundance (by trawling) in the Three Gorges Reservoir (2.80±1.86 × 10 items/km) was one order of magnitude higher than that of other sections, which affirmed the barrier effect of dams on microplastic distribution. The barrier effect was more obvious on larger size particles by comparing the results of two methods. The abundances near the left, right banks, and in the midstream showed no significant difference by both two methods, illustrating that sampling at each bank along the Yangtze River was also representative in one section. Characteristics analysis demonstrated that fragments (47.9%) dominated in trawling samples and fiber (63.4%) dominated in filtering water samples. Microplastics of small sizes (<1 mm) and transparent were dominant in samples collected by the two methods. Polyethylene (PP) and polypropylene (PE) were the dominant polymer types in the detected microplastics. In this study, we provided detailed information on microplastic pollution of the Yangtze River from the upstream to the estuary, which is useful for microplastic management and control in this area.

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