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61,005 resultsShowing papers similar to Resolving the dynamics of microplastic transport and burial in rivers requires the incorporation of fluvial sedimentary processes
ClearMaking Waves: Unraveling microplastic deposition in rivers through the lens of sedimentary processes
This review examines the sedimentary processes governing microplastic deposition and transport through river networks, synthesizing evidence from shear stress theory, hyporheic exchange, and bioturbation studies. The authors argue that bedform migration, channel reworking, and basin-scale aggradation and degradation must be incorporated into transport models to better estimate microplastic burial residence times.
Leveraging Sedimentary Process Insights to Enhance Understanding of Microplastic Deposition in Rivers
This review leverages insights from fluvial sediment transport research to improve understanding of how microplastics deposit and are buried in river networks, identifying knowledge gaps in water-sediment exchange processes and highlighting that current MP deposition estimates are biased by incomplete understanding of flow-sediment-particle interactions.
Making waves: Unraveling microplastic deposition in rivers through the lens of sedimentary processes
Researchers examined how sedimentary processes in rivers control where microplastics are deposited and how long they remain buried. They reviewed existing work on water-sediment exchange of microplastic particles and identified key gaps in understanding deposition dynamics. The study highlights that rivers serve as major pathways for transporting microplastics from land to oceans, and that sediment processes play a critical role in determining their fate.
Modelling the Fate of Microplastics in river bed sediments.
Researchers modeled microplastic transport, deposition, and burial in river bed sediments under varying hydrological conditions. River bed sediments were found to act as long-term reservoirs for microplastics, with periodic high-flow events temporarily resuspending and redistributing particles.
Exploring the influence of sediment motion on microplastic deposition in streambeds
This study systematically explored how sediment motion affects microplastic deposition in streambeds made of fine sediments, finding that sediment transport dynamics play a critical role in controlling where microplastics accumulate. The results improve understanding of microplastic fate in riverine systems.
Microplastic deposition in streams under moving bedforms
Researchers conducted flume experiments to examine microplastic deposition in sandy streambeds under moving bedform conditions, finding that bedform migration and particle size both control whether microplastics are buried or remain in suspension, with implications for estimating MP residence times in river systems.
The transport behaviour of microplastics in longitudinal mixing and hyporheic exchange under varied flow conditions
Researchers studied how microplastics move through river systems, examining both downstream transport and how particles interact with riverbeds through hyporheic exchange. Understanding these transport behaviors helps predict where microplastics accumulate in river sediments.
Hydro-geomorphological features govern the distribution, storage, and transport processes of riverbed microplastics
This study examined how river channel shape, water flow, and sediment dynamics control where microplastics accumulate, travel, and are stored in riverbeds. Identifying these hydro-geomorphological drivers is important for predicting microplastic transport to downstream ecosystems and the ocean.
Hydro-geomorphological features govern the distribution, storage, and transport processes of riverbed microplastics
This study examined how river channel shape, water flow, and sediment dynamics control where microplastics accumulate, travel, and are stored in riverbeds. Identifying these hydro-geomorphological drivers is important for predicting microplastic transport to downstream ecosystems and the ocean.
Modelling the Fate of Microplastics in river bed sediments.
Researchers modeled the fate of microplastics deposited in river bed sediments, examining how hydrological conditions influence their distribution, burial, and potential for downstream transport. The models revealed that river bed sediments act as significant long-term reservoirs for microplastic pollution.
Study of the influence of fluvial dynamics on the distribution and transport of microplastics.
Researchers studied how fluvial dynamics including flow velocity, turbulence, and river geomorphology influence the distribution and transport of microplastics in river systems. River hydrodynamics were found to be major determinants of where microplastics accumulate and how far they travel, with implications for predicting contamination patterns in river catchments.
The role of biofilm and hydrodynamics on the fate of microplastic particles in rivers: an experimental study
Researchers conducted experimental flume studies to investigate how biofilm formation and hydrodynamic conditions jointly govern microplastic particle fate in rivers, examining why some urbanized and industrialized river reaches show no significant upstream-to-downstream increase in microplastic concentration despite theoretical inputs.
The effects of streambed movement and particle size on microplastic deposition
Researchers conducted flume experiments using polypropylene fibers and polystyrene microspheres in sandy streambeds to examine how streambed motion and particle size influence microplastic deposition, finding that both factors significantly affect burial rates in riverine systems.
Storm Response of Fluvial Sedimentary Microplastics
Researchers investigated how storm events affect microplastic concentrations in river sediments, finding that flood conditions remobilize stored particles and significantly increase microplastic loads in fluvial systems. The study identified key physical controls on microplastic storage and transport in river channels.
Study of the influence of fluvial dynamics on the distribution and transport of microplastics.
Researchers studied how fluvial dynamics, including water flow, turbulence, and river morphology, influence microplastic distribution and transport in a river system. The study found that hydrological conditions strongly control where microplastics deposit and how they move through the watershed.
Flocculation and its impact on microplastic transport mechanisms in rivers
Researchers used rotating wheel laboratory experiments to investigate microplastic-sediment flocculation mechanisms in rivers, finding that fine cohesive sediments adhere to MP particles to form aggregates that modify transport behaviour and enhance deposition, contributing to MP accumulation in riverine sedimentary deposits.
Longitudinal and Vertical Transport of Microplastic Within Sediment in Rivers and Transitional Water Environments
Researchers investigated the longitudinal and vertical transport of microplastics within sediments in rivers and transitional water environments, developing models to quantify how sediment presence affects microplastic mobility and their transport toward coastal areas.
Sinks and sources: Assessing microplastic abundance in river sediment and deposit feeders in an Austral temperate urban river system
Researchers investigated microplastic abundance in river sediments and depositional zones, finding that sediment acts as both a sink and a temporary source, with stored microplastics re-mobilized during high-flow events.
Transport processes of microplastic particles in the fluvial environment : erosion, transport and deposition
This thesis examines how microplastics are eroded, transported, and deposited in river systems, tracing their movement from land sources to the ocean. The research fills an important gap in understanding how rivers act as conduits for microplastic pollution and what processes determine where plastic particles accumulate in freshwater environments.
The role of biofilm and hydrodynamics on the fate of microplastic particles in rivers: an experimental study
Researchers conducted flume and field experiments to examine how biofilm formation and hydrodynamic conditions govern the fate of microplastic particles in rivers, investigating why some MP-polluted rivers crossing industrialized areas show no significant upstream-to-downstream concentration differences. The study identified biofilm-mediated density changes and turbulence as key factors controlling whether low-density MPs remain suspended or settle into sediments.
The microplastic dynamics between river surface water and sediment compartments
Researchers monitored microplastic distribution in surface water and bottom sediments along an urban river in Japan in August 2022 and 2023, tracking how floating microplastics transported downstream by river flow are deposited into bed sediments. The study aimed to elucidate the exchange dynamics between water column and sediment compartments that account for the discrepancy between observed riverine plastic loads and expected ocean inputs.
Erosion Behavior of Different Microplastic Particles in Comparison to Natural Sediments
Researchers experimentally measured how easily different types of microplastic particles are eroded and transported in river systems compared to natural sediment. They found that critical shear stresses for microplastics ranged widely depending on particle shape, density, and size, as well as the composition of the riverbed. The study developed an equation to predict when different microplastic particles will be mobilized from river sediments, providing a tool for estimating microplastic transport rates in waterways.
Microplastic accumulation in riverbed sediment via hyporheic exchange from headwaters to mainstems
Researchers developed a model showing that hyporheic exchange between river surface water and sediment causes long-term microplastic retention, with headwater residence times averaging 5 hours per kilometer but increasing to 7 years per kilometer during low-flow conditions.
A numerical model of microplastic erosion, transport, and deposition for fluvial systems
Researchers developed a numerical model of microplastic erosion, transport, and deposition in river systems, finding that rivers act as temporary sinks trapping significant fractions of MPs before they reach the ocean, with implications for estimating marine MP loading from terrestrial sources.