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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. Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Evidence on the effectiveness of mosses for biomonitoring of microplastics in fresh water environment

Chemosphere 2018 70 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.
Fiore Capozzi, Fiore Capozzi, Rosa Carotenuto Rosa Carotenuto Fiore Capozzi, Fiore Capozzi, Fiore Capozzi, Simonetta Giordano, Rosa Carotenuto Valeria Spagnuolo, Fiore Capozzi, Rosa Carotenuto Fiore Capozzi, Fiore Capozzi, Fiore Capozzi, Valeria Spagnuolo, Fiore Capozzi, Simonetta Giordano, Simonetta Giordano, Simonetta Giordano, Valeria Spagnuolo, Simonetta Giordano, Valeria Spagnuolo, Rosa Carotenuto Simonetta Giordano, Simonetta Giordano, Valeria Spagnuolo, Simonetta Giordano, Fiore Capozzi, Valeria Spagnuolo, Simonetta Giordano, Simonetta Giordano, Rosa Carotenuto Valeria Spagnuolo, Simonetta Giordano, Rosa Carotenuto

Summary

Sphagnum moss was tested as a biomonitor for microplastic pollution in freshwater, and the moss successfully intercepted and retained plastic particles including fibers and fragments from stream water. The study establishes mosses as practical, low-cost biomonitoring tools for tracking microplastic contamination in freshwater environments.

Polymers

Mosses are well known as biomonitors of fresh water for metal pollutants, but no studies were reported so far about their ability to intercept plastic particles, although this kind of pollution has become an urgent issue worldwide. In the present work, the interaction between the moss Sphagnum palustre L. cultured in vitro and polystyrene nanoparticles (NPs) was studied for the first time in a laboratory experiment, in the view of using moss transplants for detecting microplastics in fresh water environments. The ability of S. palustre to intercept and retain polystyrene, and the effects of vitality and post-exposure washing on NP retention by moss were tested. Fluorescence microscope observations showed that polystyrene NPs were retained by moss leaves in form of small (the most abundant fraction) and large aggregates. Particle count analysis highlighted that the number of particles increased while increasing the exposure time. Moreover, moss devitalization favored NP accumulation, likely because of cell membrane damages occurred in dead moss material. Post-exposure washing induced a loss of larger aggregates, suggesting that exposure time is a key point to be carefully evaluated in field conditions. These results encourage the use of S. palustre transplants for monitoring microplastics contamination of fresh water environments.

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