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 Sign in to save

Distribution, abundance, and diversity of microplastics in the upper St. Lawrence River

Environmental Pollution 2020 198 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.
Alex Crew, Irene Gregory‐Eaves, Anthony Ricciardi

Summary

This study quantified the abundance, distribution, and diversity of microplastics in sediments of the St. Lawrence River, Canada, extending previous work on large polyethylene microbeads to a broader range of particle sizes and types. The results revealed widespread microplastic contamination across the river system, with urban areas showing the highest concentrations.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics are pervasive pollutants in fresh waters, but their distribution, abundance, and diversity in fluvial environments remain poorly documented. Previous research indicated that large polyethylene microbeads were abundant in the freshwater sediments of the St. Lawrence River. Here we extend this work by quantifying the abundance of a broad range of sizes and types of microplastics in sediments and surface water samples, and we relate these metrics to environmental variables. We sampled 21 sites for sediments that spanned a land use gradient, and 10 surface water stations above and below wastewater effluent sites, along the fluvial corridor of the St. Lawrence River between Montreal and Quebec City from July to August 2017. Microplastics were removed from sediments using an oil extraction protocol and enumerated under fluorescent microscopy. We tested predictions that environmental filters and known point sources affect microplastic concentrations in the river. The mean concentration of microplastics across all sediment sampling sites was 832 (±150 SE) plastics per kg dry weight (range 65-7562 plastics per kg dry weight), which is among the highest recorded (in the top 25%) for the world's freshwater and marine systems. Microplastic concentrations in the sediments were significantly related to a suite of environmental variables including land use and sediment particle characteristics. Particle characteristics, proximity to point sources (urban land use), and environmental filters (sediment compositional variables, % organic carbon, % inorganic carbon and distance from shore) each explained a significant fraction of variation in the microplastic composition in the sediment, with environmental filters having the greatest influence. We present a protocol that could be used to efficiently and accurately detect a broad range of microplastics until a standardized protocol is established for large-scale monitoring.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastic pollution in St. Lawrence River sediments

Researchers found polyethylene microbeads in sediments of the St. Lawrence River at concentrations that increased downstream toward the heavily populated Quebec City area. The study is one of the first to document microplastics in the sediments of a major North American freshwater system and confirms that urban wastewater is a primary source.

Article Tier 2

Surface Water Microplastics in the St. Lawrence River and Estuary in Canada

Researchers sampled the top 40 centimeters of surface water at 11 sites across the St. Lawrence River and Estuary in Canada, finding microplastics at every single site. Fibers were the most abundant type, followed by fragments, with polyester, polyethylene, polypropylene, nylon, and polystyrene the dominant materials. The study also observed that microplastics tended to aggregate more as water salinity increased toward the estuary mouth. The St. Lawrence is a major drinking water source and commercial fishery, making these baseline contamination data important for public health and ecosystem management.

Article Tier 2

From freshwaters to bivalves: Microplastic distribution along the Saint-Lawrence river-to-sea continuum

Researchers traced microplastic distribution along the Saint-Lawrence River-to-sea continuum, finding both large and small microplastics in surface water and marine bivalves, with concentrations and polymer types varying between freshwater and estuarine environments.

Article Tier 2

Microphotographs of microplastics found in the St. Lawrence River.

Researchers documented diverse microplastic particle types collected from the St. Lawrence River using microphotography, identifying polyethylene fragments, polyolefin fragments, polystyrene beads, and polyethylene fibers in multiple colors from sites including Portneuf, Trois-Rivières, and Baie Saint-Paul. The images confirm the variety of polymer types and morphologies present across both fluvial and estuarine sampling locations.

Article Tier 2

The largest estuary on the planet is not spared from plastic pollution: Case of the St. Lawrence River Estuary

Researchers conducted the first macroplastic survey along the St. Lawrence Estuary shorelines, finding ubiquitous contamination dominated by single-use polypropylene, polyethylene, and polystyrene items at an average density of 0.17 items/m², with abundance declining with distance from the Montreal metropolitan area.

Share this paper