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Validation and application of cost and time effective methods for the detection of 3–500 μm sized microplastics in the urban marine and estuarine environments surrounding Long Beach, California

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2019 118 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Kara J. Wiggin, Erika B. Holland

Summary

Researchers validated cost-effective methods using Nile Red fluorescent staining and hydrogen peroxide digestion to detect microplastics as small as 3 micrometers in urban marine and estuarine environments near Long Beach, California, finding concentrations in the Los Angeles River, San Gabriel River, and Long Beach Harbor.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MP) are detected in aquatic environments worldwide, yet detection is often limited to larger sized MP. To address this data gap, the abundance of MP 3-500 μm was assessed in the Los Angeles River, the San Gabriel River, and the Long Beach Harbor (CA, USA), three areas with highly urbanized surroundings. Whole surface water samples were taken, subjected to a hydrogen peroxide digestion and MP counts were compared between unstained visual examination and Nile Red staining identification techniques. The largest concentration of MP was found in the Los Angeles River, where 13,622 MP m were found using unstained visual examination and 641,292 MP m were found utilizing Nile Red staining. The protocol used to detect smaller sized MP is low cost, time efficient, and reproducible. This work highlights the need for more extensive sampling of smaller sized MP globally and universal testing and reporting standards for MP detection.

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