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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Microplastic pollution in urban streams across New Zealand: concentrations, composition and implications

New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 2019 44 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.
Aidan K. Mora-Teddy, Christoph D. Matthaei

Summary

Microplastic pollution was surveyed across urban streams throughout New Zealand, with plastic fragments and fibers detected at alarming concentrations in many waterways. The study highlights the widespread contamination of freshwater systems in New Zealand and identifies key sources including stormwater runoff and wastewater.

ABSTRACT Microplastic pollution in aquatic systems has been reported globally at an alarming rate, with an increasing number of documented negative biological consequences. Research on microplastic pollution in freshwaters has barely begun in New Zealand, and few studies from smaller lotic systems such as streams exist globally. We investigated the extent of microplastic pollution within urban streams across New Zealand and determined if microplastic concentrations were related to human population density and urbanisation of streams. Fifty‐two streams were surveyed across five urban agglomerations in January 2019. Microplastics were found in samples from all sites at densities ranging from <1 to 44 items/m 3 . This concentration range was comparable to global data but lower than reported in another recent New Zealand study, probably due to differences in sampling methodology. Microplastic pollution was similar across all urban centres, and neither length of urbanised catchment nor urban proportion of the stream were significant predictors of microplastic concentrations. These findings suggest microplastic pollution in New Zealand streams are comparable to larger aquatic systems globally, and that smaller urban streams are significant transport pathways for microplastics. We also recommend standardising microplastic sampling methods to a greater extent in the future, to improve comparability across studies.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastic contamination in urban aquatic environments: Occurrence characteristics in urban streams and stormwater runoff from urban surfaces

Researchers examined microplastic contamination in urban streams and stormwater runoff across different seasons and found that wastewater treatment plant discharges were a major source during dry weather. During rainy periods, stormwater runoff from roads and rooftops contributed additional microplastics, predominantly fibers and fragments. The study highlights that urban water systems receive microplastic pollution from multiple pathways year-round.

Article Tier 2

Microplastic pollution in streams spanning an urbanisation gradient

Researchers sampled microplastics in small streams across an urbanization gradient and found contamination at all sites, with concentrations comparable to those in larger rivers and lakes. Fragments and small particles between 63 and 500 micrometers were the most common forms detected. Surprisingly, catchment-scale factors like population density and stormwater overflows did not predict microplastic levels well, suggesting that local-scale sources may be more important for pollution in small streams.

Article Tier 2

Abundances and characteristics of small (< 0.3 mm) and large (0.3–5 mm) microplastics found in Aotearoa New Zealand beach sediments

Researchers conducted the first study of microplastic contamination in New Zealand waters, finding that both small (under 0.3 mm) and large (0.3–5 mm) microplastics were present across beach and water samples, with fragment and fiber morphologies dominating the assemblage.

Article Tier 2

Temporal/Spatial Trends and Concentrations of Microplastics in Streams Throughout the Central Illinois Watersheds

This study measured microplastic concentrations across streams in a U.S. city, finding elevated levels downstream of wastewater treatment plants and in urban waterways. The results highlight urban wastewater discharge as a key pathway delivering microplastics from everyday activities — including laundry — into freshwater systems.

Article Tier 2

Synthetic shorelines in New Zealand? Quantification and characterisation of microplastic pollution on Canterbury's coastlines

Microplastic particles were found on beaches across the Canterbury region of New Zealand, in both urban and non-urban coastal settings including exposed beaches, estuaries, and harbors. The widespread presence of microplastics even at non-urban sites confirms that plastic contamination has spread broadly along New Zealand's coastlines.

Share this paper