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. Environmental Sources Policy & Risk Sign in to save

The occurrence of microplastics in water bodies in urban agglomerations: Impacts of drainage system overflow in wet weather, catchment land-uses, and environmental management practices

Water Research 2020 164 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.
Hao Chen, Qilong Jia, Xin Zhao, Lei Li, Yun-Han Nie, Hui Liu, Jianfeng Ye

Summary

Microplastic concentrations in Shanghai urban waterways were six times higher during wet weather overflow events than from regular wastewater treatment plant discharges, and highest in industrial areas. The study highlights combined sewer overflow during rain events as a major but underappreciated pathway for microplastics entering city waterways.

Study Type Environmental

The footprints of microplastics in the water bodies of urban agglomerations are largely dominated by superimposed anthropogenic influences. Understanding these influences and how they are correlated is essential to better understand the occurrence and variability of microplastics in different ecosystems. This study longitudinally assessed the abundance and distribution of microplastics in the water bodies of urban agglomerations at the watershed-scale in Shanghai Megacity. Particularly, the behavior of microplastics with the impacts of drainage system overflow in wet weather (WWF), land uses, and environmental management practices were explored. WWF can greatly aggravate microplastic pollution in aquatic environments. A systemic estimation based on detailed data was used to show that the annual load of microplastics discharged via WWF in the watershed area was 8.50 × 10 p/year, which was approximately six times larger than that discharged via the local Wastewater Treatment Plant effluent. Findings here contribute to research concerning the spatial variability of aquatic microplastics and the extent to which they are affected by land use. In descending order, the highest microplastic concentrations were found in heavy industrial > commercial/public/recreational > agricultural/light industrial > agricultural > and residential areas. The longitudinal pattern of microplastics observed in the water bodies suggested that there were superimposed effects of land use and hydrodynamics. This paper is the first to provide an integrated framework that demonstrates the significant role of environmental management practices in controlling the production and transmission of microplastics to receiving waters at a city-scale. Improved management of WWF might be a tangible solution that would help achieve an immediate and large-scale reduction of microplastics in sewage. Determining the optimized management practices for different weather or hydrological conditions could be an essential factor in decreasing microplastic concentrations and altering their flow-path pattern in a given region.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastics discharged from urban drainage system: Prominent contribution of sewer overflow pollution

Researchers evaluated the abundance and distribution of microplastics in urban drainage systems in coastal Chinese cities, with a focus on sewer overflow events during storms. The study found that overflow pollution during wet weather is a prominent contributor to microplastic discharge into urban water bodies, with meteorological conditions and land use patterns significantly influencing microplastic transport and release.

Article Tier 2

Real-time variabilities in microplastic abundance and characteristics of urban surface runoff and sewer overflow in wet weather as impacted by land use and storm factors

Researchers conducted real-time field monitoring of microplastic abundance and characteristics in urban surface runoff and sewer overflows in Shanghai during storm events. Microplastic concentrations in runoff reached up to 4,969 particles per liter and were strongly influenced by land use type and storm intensity.

Article Tier 2

Change in microplastic concentration during various temporal events downstream of a combined sewage overflow and in an urban stormwater creek

Researchers examined how microplastic concentrations in urban waterways changed during rain events, snowmelt, and combined sewage overflow episodes, finding that stormwater runoff and sewer overflows substantially increase microplastic loads, with event type and intensity influencing concentration patterns.

Article Tier 2

Spatiotemporal dynamics of microplastics in urban stormwater runoff: Functional area effects and transport pathways (Shanghai, China)

During a heavy rainfall event in Shanghai, microplastic concentrations in stormwater peaked within just 5 minutes in dining areas (nearly 690 particles per liter), far exceeding residential and parking zones, driven by a pronounced first-flush effect. The results show that food-service land use is an underrecognized microplastic hotspot, with urban stormwater rapidly exporting these particles to waterways.

Article Tier 2

[Pollution Status and Pollution Behavior of Microplastic in Surface Water and Sediment of Urban Rivers].

Researchers surveyed microplastic pollution in surface water and sediments of eight rivers across urban and suburban areas of Shanghai, finding widespread contamination that varied by location and urbanization level. The study provides a detailed picture of how urban rivers act as pathways for microplastics moving from land to sea.

Share this paper