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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 Sign in to save

Revealing accumulation zones of plastic pellets in sandy beaches

Environmental Pollution 2016 101 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Danilo Balthazar-Silva, Fabiana T. Moreira, Fabiana T. Moreira, Alexander Turra Fabiana T. Moreira, Fabiana T. Moreira, Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Fabiana T. Moreira, Fabiana T. Moreira, Fabiana T. Moreira, Fabiana T. Moreira, Alexander Turra Fabiana T. Moreira, Fabiana T. Moreira, Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Danilo Balthazar-Silva, Danilo Balthazar-Silva, Alexander Turra Fabiana T. Moreira, Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Lucas Barbosa, Alexander Turra Fabiana T. Moreira, Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Fabiana T. Moreira, Fabiana T. Moreira, Danilo Balthazar-Silva, Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Lucas Barbosa, Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Danilo Balthazar-Silva, Lucas Barbosa, Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Fabiana T. Moreira, Fabiana T. Moreira, Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra Alexander Turra

Summary

Researchers evaluated plastic pellet accumulation across 13 sandy beaches in São Paulo state, Brazil, using transects and vertical sediment profiles to one meter depth, identifying regional accumulation hotspots near ports and factories and finding that coastal dunes accumulated more pellets than backshores, with most concentrated in the top 40 cm.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics such as pellets are reported worldwide on sandy beaches, and have possible direct and indirect impacts on the biota and physical characteristics of the habitats where they accumulate. Evaluations of their standing stock at different spatial scales generate data on levels of contamination. This information is needed to identify accumulation zones and the specific beach habitats and communities that are likely to be most affected. Standing stocks of plastic pellets were evaluated in 13 sandy beaches in São Paulo state, Brazil. The sampling strategy incorporated across-shore transects from coastal dunes and backshores, and vertical profiles of the accumulated pellets down to 1 m depth below the sediment surface. Accumulation zones were identified at regional (among beaches) and local (between compartments) scales. At the regional scale pellet density tended to increase at beaches on the central and southwestern coast, near ports and factories that produce and transport the largest amounts of pellets in the country. At the local scale coastal dunes showed larger accumulations of pellets than backshores. For both compartments pellets tended to occur deeper in areas where standing stocks were larger. Most of the pellets were concentrated from the surface down to 0.4 m depth, suggesting that organisms inhabiting this part of the sediment column are more exposed to the risks associated with the presence of pellets. Our findings shed light on the local and regional scales of spatial variability of microplastics and their consequences for assessment and monitoring schemes in coastal compartments.

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