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Plastic debris in freshwater systems worldwide

Authors :
Nava, Veronica
Aherne, Julian
Alfonso, María B.
Geraldes, Ana Maria
Attermeyer, Katrin
Bao, Roberto
Bartrons, Mireia
Berger, Stella
Biernaczyk, Marcin
Bissen, Raphael
Brookes, Justin
Brown, David
Candian, Giulia
Cañedo-Argüelles, Miguel
Canle, Moisés
Capelli, Camilla
Cereijo, Jose Luís
Carballeira, Rafael
Chawchai, Sakonvan
Chen, Guangjie
Christensen, Søren T.
Christoffersen, Kirsten Seestern
Eyto, Elvira de
Delgado, Jorge
Doubek, Jonathan
Dusaucy, Julia
Erina, Oxana
Ersoy, Zeynep
Feuchtmayr, Heidrun
Lepori, Fabio
Frezzotti, Maria Luce
Galafassi, Silvia
Gateuille, David
Gonçalves, Vítor
Grossart, Hans-Peter
Hamilton, David
Kangur, Külli
Kankılıç, Gökben Başaran
Kessler, Rebecca
Kiel, Christine
Krynak, Edward M.
Leiva-Presa, Àngels
Matias, Miguel
Matsuzaki, Shin-Ichiro
McElarney, Yvonne
Mitchell, Mark
Messyasz, Beata
Mlambo, Musa
Motitsoe, Samuel N.
Owens, Caroline
Özkundakci, Deniz
Pinnow, Solvig
Pociecha, Agnieszka
Raposeiro, Pedro M.
Rõõm, Eva-Ingrid
Rotta, Federica
Salmaso, Nico
Scordo, Facundo
Sibomana, Claver
Siewert, Daniel
Stepanowska, Katarzyna
Sudeep, Chandra
Tavşanoğlu, Ülkü Nihan
Tereshina, Maria
Thompson, James
Tolotti, Monica
Valois, Amanda
Verburg, Piet
Wesolek, Brian
Weyhenmeyer, Gesa
Wu, Naicheng
Zawisza, Edyta
Zink, Lauren
Leoni, Barbara
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Associazione Italiana di Oceanologia e Limnologia, 2022.

Abstract

Plastic debris is widespread in freshwater ecosystems, but a rigorous assessment of its global distribution has been hindered by a lack of comprehensive and comparable data. We performed the first standardized global survey of lakes to assess the quantity and type of plastics (>250μm). We included 38 lakes located in 23 different countries distributed across five continents, spanning different environmental gradients and varying levels of anthropogenic stress. All samples were collected by horizontal trawling of a plankton net and subsequently treated with hydrogen peroxide. We identified 9425 plastic particles, which were classified based on shape, color, and size. Polymer identification was carried out using Raman micro-spectroscopy. Our results showed that the concentration of plastics spanned four orders of magnitude (10-3-101 particles/m3). Fibers (49%) and fragments (41%) were the most frequently detected particles, suggesting a secondary origin of plastic contamination. The most commonly identified polymers were polyester (30%), polypropylene (20%), and polyethylene (16%), which are widely used in short life-cycle products and account for the majority of global plastic production. Further, we found that urban-related attributes of lakes/watersheds influenced the occurrence and type of plastics in lentic systems and larger and deeper lakes with higher retention times are accumulating plastic debris at higher concentrations. info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......1255..0dcd7d8aa2abb7d05ad0cbba47b9ef64