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Global Pattern of Microplastics (MPs) in Commercial Food-Grade Salts: Sea Salt as an Indicator of Seawater MP Pollution

Environmental Science & Technology 2018 387 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.
Jisu Kim, Seung‐Kyu Kim Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Hee-Jee Lee, Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Hee-Jee Lee, Seung‐Kyu Kim Hyunjung Kim, Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Hee-Jee Lee, Hee-Jee Lee, Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Jisu Kim, Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Hyunjung Kim, Hee-Jee Lee, Hee-Jee Lee, Seung‐Kyu Kim Hyunjung Kim, Hee-Jee Lee, Hee-Jee Lee, Hyunjung Kim, Seung‐Kyu Kim Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Jisu Kim, Jisu Kim, Jisu Kim, Jisu Kim, Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Seung‐Kyu Kim Hee-Jee Lee, Seung‐Kyu Kim Hyunjung Kim, Seung‐Kyu Kim Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Seung‐Kyu Kim Hee-Jee Lee, Seung‐Kyu Kim Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Jisu Kim, Jisu Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Jisu Kim, Hee-Jee Lee, Hyunjung Kim, Hyunjung Kim, Hee-Jee Lee, Jisu Kim, Seung‐Kyu Kim

Summary

A global analysis of commercial sea salts found microplastics in samples from 21 countries, with the highest concentrations in sea salts from Asia and the lowest in rock and lake salts. The findings suggest that sea salt can serve as an indicator of seawater microplastic pollution levels in surrounding regions.

Study Type Environmental

Previous studies have identified microplastics (MPs) in commercial table salts but could not exactly address the origin of the MPs because of several limitations. The present study is based on the hypothesis that commercial sea salts can act as an indicator of MP pollution in the surrounding environment unless the MPs are filtered out during the manufacturing process. A total of 39 different salt brands produced at geospatially different sites, including 28 sea salt brands from 16 countries/regions on six continents, were investigated. A wide range of MP content (in number of MPs per kg of salt; n/kg) was found: 0-1674 n/kg (excluding one outlier of 13 629 n/kg) in sea salts, 0-148 n/kg in rock salt, and 28-462 n/kg in lake salt. Relatively high MP content was identified in sea salts produced in Asian countries/regions. The abundance of MPs in unrefined sea salts ( n = 25) exhibited significant linear correlations with plastic emissions from worldwide rivers ( r<sup>2</sup>= 0.33; p = 0.003) and with the MP pollution levels in surrounding seawater ( r<sup>2</sup>= 0.46; p = 0.021) in the published literature. The results indicate that not only is Asia a hot spot of global plastic pollution, as previous studies have suggested, but also that sea salt can be a good indicator of the magnitude of MP pollution in the surrounding marine environment.

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