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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 Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Microplastics in freshwater river sediments in Shanghai, China: A case study of risk assessment in mega-cities

Environmental Pollution 2017 666 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Guyu Peng Pei Xu, Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Mengyu Bai, Mengyu Bai, Daoji Li, Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Daoji Li, Guyu Peng Daoji Li, Bangshang Zhu, Daoji Li, Mengyu Bai, Mengyu Bai, Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Pei Xu, Pei Xu, Pei Xu, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Pei Xu, Mengyu Bai, Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Daoji Li, Pei Xu, Daoji Li, Bangshang Zhu, Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Pei Xu, Pei Xu, Pei Xu, Pei Xu, Pei Xu, Mengyu Bai, Pei Xu, Mengyu Bai, Guyu Peng Daoji Li, Guyu Peng Guyu Peng Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Pei Xu, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Guyu Peng Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Mengyu Bai, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Daoji Li, Guyu Peng

Summary

Researchers characterized microplastics in freshwater river sediments across Shanghai, China, finding widespread contamination with higher concentrations near urban areas and industrial zones, dominated by fibers and fragments.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics, which are plastic debris with a particle diameter of less than 5 mm, have attracted growing attention in recent years. Its widespread distributions in a variety of habitats have urged scientists to understand deeper regarding their potential impact on the marine living resources. Most studies on microplastics hitherto are focused on the marine environment, and research on risk assessment methodology is still limited. To understand the distribution of microplastics in urban rivers, this study investigated river sediments in Shanghai, the largest urban area in China. Seven sites were sampled to ensure maximum coverage of the city's central districts, and a tidal flat was also included to compare with river samples. Density separation, microscopic inspection and μ-FT-IR analysis were conducted to analyze the characteristics of microplastics and the type of polymers. The average abundance of microplastics in six river sediment samples was 802 items per kilogram of dry weight. The abundance in rivers was one to two orders of magnitude higher than in the tidal flat. White microplastic spheres were most commonly distributed in river sediments. Seven types of microplastics were identified, of which polypropylene was the most prevailing polymers presented. The study then conducted risk assessment of microplastics in sediments based on the observed results, and proposed a framework of environmental risk assessment. After reviewing waste disposal related legislation and regulations in China, this study conclude that in situ data and legitimate estimations should be incorporated as part of the practice when developing environmental policies aiming to tackle microplastic pollution.

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