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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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Advances and challenges of microplastic pollution in freshwater ecosystems: A UK perspective

Environmental Pollution 2019 244 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Stephanie Wright Frank J. Kelly, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Yuchuan Meng, Frank J. Kelly, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Yuchuan Meng, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Yuchuan Meng, Stephanie Wright Frank J. Kelly, Frank J. Kelly, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Yuchuan Meng, Yuchuan Meng, Frank J. Kelly, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Frank J. Kelly, Yuchuan Meng, Yuchuan Meng, Yuchuan Meng, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Frank J. Kelly, Frank J. Kelly, Frank J. Kelly, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Frank J. Kelly, Frank J. Kelly, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Yuchuan Meng, Frank J. Kelly, Yuchuan Meng, Frank J. Kelly, Frank J. Kelly, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Frank J. Kelly, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Frank J. Kelly, Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright Stephanie Wright

Summary

This literature review assesses the current state of knowledge on microplastic pollution in UK freshwater ecosystems. Researchers found that only 32% of published UK microplastic studies have focused on freshwater environments, revealing significant knowledge gaps in transport dynamics, ecological impacts, and analytical standardization. The study highlights the need for more research on how microplastics move through and accumulate in freshwater systems, and predicts that biological impacts will mirror those already documented in marine settings.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics have been increasingly documented in freshwater ecosystems in recent years, and growing concerns have been raised about their potential environmental health risks. To assess the current state of knowledge, with a focus on the UK, a literature review of existing freshwater microplastics studies was conducted. Sampling and analytical methodologies currently used to detect, characterise and quantify microplastics were assessed and microplastic types, sources, occurrence, transport and fate, and microplastic-biota interactions in the UK's freshwater environments were examined. Just 32% of published microplastics studies in the UK have focused on freshwater environments. These papers cover microplastic contamination of sediments, water and biota via a range of methods, rendering comparisons difficult. However, secondary microplastics are the most common type, and there are point (e.g. effluent) and diffuse (non-point, e.g. sludge) sources. Microplastic transport over a range of spatial scales and with different residence times will be influenced by particle characteristics, external forces (e.g. flow regimes), physical site characteristics (e.g. bottom topography), the degree of biofouling, and anthropogenic activity (e.g. dam release), however, there is a lack of data on this. It is predicted that impacts on biota will mirror that of the marine environment. There are many important gaps in current knowledge; field data on the transport of microplastics from diffuse sources are less available, especially in England. We provide recommendations for future research to further our understanding of microplastics in the environment and their impacts on freshwater biota in the UK.

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