Abstract
Environmental sampling plays an important role in quantitative and qualitative investigation of plastic pollution. Rivers are a major source, carrying plastic litter into the oceans. Microplastic sampling in riverine and coastal environments is often a challenging task due to limited access, time taken, costs, human resources, etc. Our present study evaluated the performance of newly developed sampling devices (Albatross Mark 5 and 6 (AM-5 and AM-6)) that were suitable to collect floating and suspended microplastic samples in challenging freshwater and coastal environments (95 locations). Our observations indicated a similar magnitude of microplastic concentrations with AM-5 and AM-6 sampling compared to conventional plankton nets. The sampling duration, originally 10–60 min (by plankton net), was reduced to 3 min (AM-5 and AM-6) for sampling water volumes of approximately 10 m3. The developed AM-6 device was used to collect samples from riverine and coastal environments in Japan. The microplastic particle polymer composition (using Fourier transform infrared spectrophotometry (FT-IR)), size, and shape (microscopic images) were investigated. The observations showed a statistically significant particle size reduction from the riverine to coastal areas. The dominant polymer types detected were polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP). The observations were complied with the coastal microplastic observations that were reported for previous studies in Japanese water environments.
Highlights
Aquatic plastic pollution is considered to be one of the most challenging global environmental issues
Both AM-5 and AM-6 were operated for approximately 3 min during the comparison period
The operated filtration rate found for AM-5 and AM-6 was between 2.5 and 7.0 m3 /min
Summary
Aquatic plastic pollution is considered to be one of the most challenging global environmental issues. The longevity of plastic is estimated to be hundreds to thousands of years. The plastics released into the environment will remain for hundreds of years [1]. The adverse effects of plastic litter in the environment have been widely discussed in the literature [2,3]. Plastic contaminants in freshwater are a threat to the ecosystem and a potential health hazard to humans [4,5,6]. Apart from that, freshwater resources (i.e., rivers) carry plastic litter into marine environments. Local and regional plastic pollution become a global concern. Rivers are considered to be a primary contamination pathway of microplastics to reach the oceans.
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