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Microplastic in surface waters of urban rivers: concentration, sources, and associated bacterial assemblages

Ecosphere 2016 565 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Amanda R. McCormick, John J. Kelly, John J. Kelly, John J. Kelly, John J. Kelly, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein John W. Scott, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein John W. Scott, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Amanda R. McCormick, Amanda R. McCormick, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Maxwell G. London, Amanda R. McCormick, Maxwell G. London, Maxwell G. London, Maxwell G. London, John W. Scott, John J. Kelly, John W. Scott, Timothy J. Hoellein John W. Scott, John W. Scott, John J. Kelly, Amanda R. McCormick, Joshua Hittie, Maxwell G. London, John W. Scott, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein John W. Scott, John W. Scott, Timothy J. Hoellein John W. Scott, Maxwell G. London, Joshua Hittie, Amanda R. McCormick, Joshua Hittie, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein John J. Kelly, John W. Scott, Maxwell G. London, Maxwell G. London, Amanda R. McCormick, Joshua Hittie, Maxwell G. London, Maxwell G. London, John J. Kelly, John W. Scott, John W. Scott, John J. Kelly, John W. Scott, John J. Kelly, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein John J. Kelly, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein John W. Scott, John J. Kelly, John W. Scott, John J. Kelly, Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein Timothy J. Hoellein John J. Kelly, John J. Kelly, Timothy J. Hoellein John W. Scott, John W. Scott, Timothy J. Hoellein

Summary

Researchers measured microplastic levels in the surface waters of the Chicago River and its urban tributaries, finding concentrations as high as 1.94 particles per cubic meter near wastewater outflows. They discovered that microplastic fibers and pellets were often colonized by bacterial communities distinct from those in the surrounding water. The study provides early evidence that urban rivers are significant conduits for microplastic pollution and that these particles may serve as rafts for microorganisms.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract The ecological dynamics of microplastic (<5 mm) are well documented in marine ecosystems, but the sources, abundance, and ecological role of microplastic in rivers are unknown and likely to be substantial. Microplastic fibers (e.g., synthetic fabrics) and pellets (e.g., abrasives in personal care products) are abundant in wastewater treatment plant ( WWTP ) effluent, and can serve as a point source of microplastic in rivers. The buoyancy, hydrophobic surface, and long transport distance of microplastic make it a novel substrate for the selection and dispersal of unique microbial assemblages. We measured microplastic concentration and bacterial assemblage composition on microplastic and natural surfaces upstream and downstream of WWTP effluent sites at nine rivers in Illinois, United States. Microplastic concentration was higher downstream of WWTP effluent outfall sites in all but two rivers. Pellets, fibers, and fragments were the dominant microplastic types, and polymers were identified as polypropylene, polyethylene, and polystyrene. Mean microplastic flux was 1,338,757 pieces per day, although the flux was highly variable among nine sites (min = 15,520 per day, max = 4,721,709 per day). High‐throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA genes showed bacterial assemblage composition was significantly different among microplastic, seston, and water column substrates. Microplastic bacterial assemblages had lower taxon richness, diversity, and evenness than those on other substrates, and microplastic selected for taxa that may degrade plastic polymers (e.g., Pseudomonas ) and those representing common human intestinal pathogens (e.g., Arcobacter ). Effluent from WWTP s in rivers is an important component of the global plastic “life cycle,” and microplastic serves as a novel substrate that selects and transports distinct bacterial assemblages in urban rivers. Rates of microplastic deposition, consumption by stream biota, and the metabolic capacity of microplastic biofilms in rivers are unknown and merit further research.

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