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Quantifying annual microplastic emissions of an urban catchment: Surface runoff vs wastewater sources.

Authors :
Imbulana, Sachithra
Tanaka, Shuhei
Oluwoye, Ibukun
Source :
Journal of Environmental Management. Jun2024, Vol. 360, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Urban clusters are recognized as hotspots of microplastic pollution, and the associated urban rivers convey microplastics into the global oceans. Despite this knowledge, the relative contributions of various sources to the annual microplastic emissions from urban catchments remain scarcely quantified. Here, we quantified microplastic emissions from a riverine urban catchment in Japan. The total microplastics (size range: 10–5000 μm) released from the catchment amounted to 269.1 tons/annum, of which 78.1% is contributed by surface runoff and other uncontrolled emissions (UCE), and 21.1% emerges from the regulated wastewater (controlled emissions; CE), implying that approximately one-fifth is intercepted and removed by the wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). This further indicated higher microplastic pollution by unmanaged surface runoff compared to untreated wastewater. In the dry season, WWTPs contributed significantly to the reduction of total microplastic emissions (95%) compared to wet periods (8%). On an annual scale, the treated effluent occupies only 0.1% of the total microplastics released to the river network (212.4 tons/annum), while the remaining portion is dominated by UCE, i.e., primarily surface runoff emissions (98.9%), and trivially by the background microplastic inputs that are potentially derived through atmospheric depositions in dry days (1.0%). It was shown that moderate and heavy rainfall events which occur during 18% of the year (within the context of Japan), leading to 95% of the annual microplastic emissions, are crucial for pollution control of urban rivers. Furthermore, our study demonstrated that surface area-normalized microplastic emissions from an urban catchment (∼0.8 tons/km2/annum) is globally relevant, especially for planning microplastic interventions for developed cities. • Wastewater treatment removes 21% of annual microplastic (MP; 10–5000 μm) emissions. • Higher MP emissions occur through surface runoff than untreated wastewater. • Surface runoff contributes to 99% of annual MP emissions (AMPE) into rivers. • Heavy and moderate rains, occupying 18% of the year, cause 95% of AMPE into rivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03014797
Volume :
360
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Environmental Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177566341
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.121123