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Distribution of microplastics in soil and freshwater environments: Global analysis and framework for transport modeling

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 274, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.116552

Keywords

Terrestrial plastics; Concentration gradient; Biodegradation; Microplastic shape; Fiber percentage; Transport models

Funding

  1. UCLA Samueli Engineering School
  2. UCLA Sustainable LA Grand Challenge
  3. UCLA Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering

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The concentration of microplastics in terrestrial environments can vary by up to eight orders of magnitude, with higher concentrations in inland locations such as glaciers and urban stormwater. Studies suggest that microplastic concentrations are lower in water bodies at terrestrial boundaries like estuaries. Fibers are preferentially transported to coastal sediments over inland water bodies, indicating potential differences in microplastic distribution patterns.
Microplastics are continuously released into the terrestrial environment from sources where they are used and produced. These microplastics accumulate in soils, sediments, and freshwater bodies, and some are conveyed via wind and water to the oceans. The concentration gradient between terrestrial inland and coastal regions, the factors that influence the concentration, and the fundamental transport processes that could dynamically affect the distribution of microplastics are unclear. We analyzed microplastic concentration reported in 196 studies from 49 countries or territories from all continents and found that microplastic concentrations in soils or sediments and surface water could vary by up to eight orders of magnitude. Mean microplastic concentrations in inland locations such as glacier (191 n L-1) and urban stormwater (55 n L-1) were up to two orders of magnitude greater than the concentrations in rivers (0.63 n L-1) that convey microplastics from inland locations to water bodies in terrestrial boundary such as estuaries (0.15 n L-1). However, only 20% of studies reported microplastics below 20 mu m, indicating the concentration in these systems can change with the improvement of microplastic detection technology. Analysis of data from laboratory studies reveals that biodegradation can also reduce the concentration and size of deposited microplastics in the terrestrial environment. Fiber percentage was higher in the sediments in the coastal areas than the sediments in inland water bodies, indicating fibers are preferentially transported to the terrestrial boundary. Finally, we provide theoretical frameworks to predict microplastics transport and identify potential hotspots where microplastics may accumulate. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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