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A green, fast protocol to estimate the accumulation of airborne anthropogenic microfibers in in urban areas: effects of season and rainfall.

PeerJ 2026 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Anna Gaglione, Angelo Granata, Fiore Capozzi, Antonio Rallo, Simonetta Giordano, Maria Cristina Sorrentino, Valeria Spagnuolo

Summary

Researchers investigated the use of ivy leaves as passive biomonitors for airborne anthropogenic microfibers in six urban sites across Italy, finding that fiber accumulation varied significantly by land use and season, and that heavy rainfall events temporarily reduced fiber loads on leaf surfaces.

Plastics represent a major organic pollutant, but research focused on their biomonitoring in the air has only recently received attention. In the present work, we investigated the ability of leaves to distinguish different levels of air contamination due to anthropogenic microfibers (MFs) in six urban sites characterized by different land uses (industrial, urban, and green), and the effect of wet/dry season on their accumulation. Moreover, the effect of pouring rain on MFs accumulation was estimated by transplants of . Microfiber extraction was done by tape tearing on 1 g composite leaf samples on the leaf surface. In summer, the highest number of MFs were found in the leaves from the industrial site (160), followed by urban ones (84-125), and green parks (48-54). The accumulation of MFs was overall higher in summer than in winter, due to the rain-washing effect in the latter, and the different leaf traits observed in the two seasons. The development of glandular hairs during summer could contribute to increasing the accumulation of MFs observed in this period under conditions of reduced precipitation. In agreement, when comparing MFs fallout on leaves of sheltered and unsheltered transplants after a heavy rainfall, the number counted on the latter was significantly lower, suggesting that precipitations reduce MFs deposition. These findings reinforce the suitability of leaves as a bioindicator for airborne anthropogenic MFs. Moreover, the pronounced seasonal differences, as well as the higher MFs loads during dry summer months, indicate that monitoring sensitivity is enhanced under low-rainfall conditions.

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