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Identification of tidal trapping of microplastics in a temperate salt marsh system using sea surface microlayer sampling
Summary
Researchers used sea surface microlayer sampling to investigate tidal trapping of microplastics in a temperate salt marsh estuary, examining how the estuarine filter moderates land-to-sea microplastic transfer through vegetative trapping and particle flocculation. The study found that the sea surface microlayer captures microplastic-enriched material during tidal cycles, with salt marsh vegetation acting as a significant retention zone.
Microplastics are contaminants of increasing global environmental concern. Estuaries are a major transport pathway for land-derived plastics to the open ocean but are relatively understudied compared to coastal and open marine environments. The role of the "estuarine filter", by which the supply of sediments and contaminants to the sea is moderated by processes including vegetative trapping and particle flocculation, remains poorly defined for microplastics land to sea transfer. Here, we focus on the sea surface microlayer (SML) as a vector for microplastics, and use SML sampling to assess microplastic trapping in a temperate marsh system in Southampton Water, UK. The SML is known to concentrate microplastics relative to the underlying water and is the first part of rising tidal waters to traverse intertidal and upper tidal surfaces. Sampling a salt marsh creek at high temporal resolution allowed assessment of microplastics in-wash and outflow from the salt marsh, and its relationship with tidal state and bulk suspended sediment concentrations (SSC), over spring and neap tides. A statistically significant decrease in microplastics abundance from the flood tide to the ebb tide was found, and a weak positive relationship with SSC observed.