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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. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

An assessment of microplastics threat to the marine environment: A short review in context of the Arabian/Persian Gulf

Marine Environmental Research 2020 60 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, S.M. Al–Salem Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, S.M. Al–Salem S.M. Al–Salem Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, S.M. Al–Salem Saif Uddin, S.M. Al–Salem Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, S.M. Al–Salem Faiza Al‐Yamani, Saif Uddin, S.M. Al–Salem Saif Uddin, S.M. Al–Salem S.M. Al–Salem Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, Saif Uddin, S.M. Al–Salem

Summary

This review assessed the threat of microplastics to the marine environment of the Arabian/Persian Gulf, highlighting the scarcity of regional data despite high plastic use and waste generation rates in the area, and calling for more systematic research efforts in this understudied region.

Microplastics are recognised as a (persistent) pollutant and are believed to be ubiquitous in the marine environment. The importance of this issue is evident from the large number of technical publications and research efforts within the past decade. However, the Arabian (Persian) Gulf region has few reported datasets in spite of being an area with excessive plastic use and a hefty generation rate of plastic solid waste. This communication aims at stimulating a discussion on this topic focusing on the available regional and international datasets, along with the environmental conditions that are likely to contribute to the disintegration and transport of the plastic debris rendering it as microplastic. This work also highlights some of the constraints in sampling techniques, identification methods, and the reported units of microplastics. Most studies employ neuston nets of variable dimensions that samples different thicknesses of surface water, which also posses a major constraint in standardising field sample collection. Extrapolation of a trawl to units such as particles.km without considering the fact that neuston nets collect three-dimensional samples, is also another aspect discussed in this communication. This study also intends to initiate a discussion on standardising the practices across the region to enable an intercomparison of the reported data. In addition, it calls for a comprehensive assessment using the standardized methodology for putting a mitigation plan for microplastics as a potential threat detected in environmental sinks.

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