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Pollution Load and Transport Dynamics Govern Microplastic Export from Subtropical Estuaries

ACS ES&T Water 2026 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ge Yan, Marcus Wharton, Marcus Wharton, Kyeong Park, Marcus Wharton, Kyeong Park, David Hala Karl Kaiser, Kyeong Park, Kyeong Park, Karl Kaiser, Karl Kaiser, David Hala Marcus Wharton, Karl Kaiser, Jing Du, Karl Kaiser, Kyeong Park, Ge Yan, Karl Kaiser, Karl Kaiser, M. Bryan Gahn, Karl Kaiser, Karl Kaiser, David Hala Karl Kaiser, Karl Kaiser, David Hala

Summary

Researchers used pyrolysis-GC/MS and settling velocity experiments to characterize microplastic concentrations and transport dynamics across Gulf of America estuaries, finding that Galveston Bay had the highest polymer loads and that estuaries act as semipermeable filters — intermittently trapping and tide-modulated exporting microplastics to coastal waters — with polymer properties and hydrodynamic forcing jointly governing retention and export.

Estuaries are dynamic but understudied nodes in the global plastic cycle where hydrodynamics and particle interactions govern microplastic fate. We applied high-sensitivity pyrolysis gas chromatography tandem mass spectrometry and elutriation-based settling velocity experiments to quantify polymer-specific concentrations and settling behavior across Gulf of America estuaries. Site-averaged concentrations were highest in Galveston Bay (0.82–19.8 μg L–1), particularly along the Houston Ship Channel, followed by Matagorda Bay (0.09–3.7 μg L–1), whereas other Gulf estuaries had lower concentrations (0.12–3.4 μg L–1). Polymer compositions differed among estuaries likely driven by specific point sources. Settling experiments revealed a continuum of velocities, from buoyant to >38 m d–1, with frequent deviations from density-based expectations due to aggregation, biofouling, and resuspension. Time-series observations at estuarine mouths showed ebb-dominant export, indicating temporary retention within estuaries followed by tide-modulated export to the coastal ocean. Comparisons with transport modeling confirmed that retention and export depended on both polymer properties and hydrodynamic forcing. These results demonstrated that estuaries act as semipermeable filters, intermittently trapping and remobilizing microplastics before exporting them to the shelf, with important implications for regional and global plastic budgets.

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