Abstract

Plastic waste as a persistent contaminant of our environment is a matter of increasing concern due to the largely unknown long-term effects on biota. Although freshwater systems are known to be the transport paths of plastic debris to the ocean, most research has been focused on marine environments. In recent years, freshwater studies have advanced rapidly, but they rarely address the spatial distribution of plastic debris in the water column. A methodology for measuring microplastic transport at various depths that is applicable to medium and large rivers is needed. We present a new methodology offering the possibility of measuring microplastic transport at different depths of verticals that are distributed within a profile. The net-based device is robust and can be applied at high flow velocities and discharges. Nets with different sizes (41 µm, 250 µm, and 500 µm) are exposed in three different depths of the water column. The methodology was tested in the Austrian Danube River, showing a high heterogeneity of microplastic concentrations within one cross section. Due to turbulent mixing, the different densities of the polymers, aggregation, and the growth of biofilms, plastic transport cannot be limited to the surface layer of a river, and must be examined within the whole water column as for suspended sediments. These results imply that multipoint measurements are required for obtaining the spatial distribution of plastic concentration and are therefore a prerequisite for calculating the passing transport. The analysis of filtration efficiency and side-by-side measurements with different mesh sizes showed that 500 µm nets led to optimal results.

Highlights

  • Due to their excellent material properties, plastics started off their triumphant advance to wide popularity in the 1950s

  • We aimed to develop a sampling strategy that is applicable to medium- and large-sized rivers, addressing the water surface, but the entire transport of plastic particles in the water column

  • The first measurements with the device, addressing multiple depths within the water column and various vertical profiles distributed over the cross section, showed the spatial heterogeneity of the plastic transport distribution

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Summary

Introduction

Due to their excellent material properties, plastics started off their triumphant advance to wide popularity in the 1950s. Worldwide plastic production is still increasing rapidly, from 230 million tons in 2005 to 322 million tons in 2015 [1], which equals a growth rate of 29% in the last ten years. Roughly 40 kg of plastics are produced for each human being every year. The useful lifetime of plastics, especially for single-use packaging material which accounts for around 40% of the plastic material demand in Europe [1], is often relatively short. Their primary advantages of being waterproof and resistant make plastics highly persistent in our environment.

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