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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 Sign in to save

High-levels of microplastic pollution in a large, remote, mountain lake

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2014 1428 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.
Sherri A. Mason, Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, Christopher M. Free, Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, Christopher M. Free, Christopher M. Free, Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Olaf P. Jensen, Olaf P. Jensen, Olaf P. Jensen, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Bazartseren Boldgiv, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, N. Williamson, Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, N. Williamson, Marcus Eriksen Bazartseren Boldgiv, Sherri A. Mason, Bazartseren Boldgiv, Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, Marcus Eriksen Sherri A. Mason, Sherri A. Mason, Marcus Eriksen Marcus Eriksen

Summary

Researchers discovered high levels of microplastic pollution in a large, remote mountain lake, finding concentrations comparable to lakes in densely populated areas, suggesting that atmospheric deposition can deliver substantial microplastic loads to even isolated environments.

Study Type Environmental

Despite the large and growing literature on microplastics in the ocean, little information exists on microplastics in freshwater systems. This study is the first to evaluate the abundance, distribution, and composition of pelagic microplastic pollution in a large, remote, mountain lake. We quantified pelagic microplastics and shoreline anthropogenic debris in Lake Hovsgol, Mongolia. With an average microplastic density of 20,264 particles km(-2), Lake Hovsgol is more heavily polluted with microplastics than the more developed Lakes Huron and Superior in the Laurentian Great Lakes. Fragments and films were the most abundant microplastic types; no plastic microbeads and few pellets were observed. Household plastics dominated the shoreline debris and were comprised largely of plastic bottles, fishing gear, and bags. Microplastic density decreased with distance from the southwestern shore, the most populated and accessible section of the park, and was distributed by the prevailing winds. These results demonstrate that without proper waste management, low-density populations can heavily pollute freshwater systems with consumer plastics.

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