4.7 Review

Critical review on microplastics in fecal matter: Research progress, analytical methods and future outlook

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 778, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146395

Keywords

Human stool; Microplastics; Plastic pollution; Seal; Standardization

Funding

  1. CONACYT [274276]

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This review critically summarizes and compares methodologies for determining microplastics in feces and outlines global levels and characteristics of microplastics detected in feces. Despite methodological variations, most studies rely on digestion processes involving H2O2 and KOH, and combining microscopical sorting and spectroscopic methods for identification and characterization of microplastics. The review also identifies analytical challenges and suggests appropriate methods for researching microplastic contamination in feces.
There has been an ever-increasing attention over years for investigating microplastics in feces of lower to higher trophic organisms from diverse environments. Focusing on the standardization of methodologies for reliable generation and comparison of data is one of the important aspects in microplastic area. This first review, comprising 20 studies in total, critically summarizes and compares the methodological approaches for the determination of microplastics in feces as well outlines the levels and characteristics of microplastics detected in feces worldwide. Contaminations and QA/QC measures are also discussed. Despite variations among the approaches, most studies (n = 12) described herein rely on the digestion processes involving H2O2 (n = 7) and KOH (n = 6) for the separation of microplastics, whereas very few included wet sieving (n = 5), density separation using NaCl (n = 3) and NaI (n = 1) and enzymatic digestion (n = 2). Microscopical sorting and spectroscopic methods such as infrared and Raman were combined for identification and characterization of microplastics. The detected microplastics varied by size, shape, color and polymer types and the differences in reporting units of microplastic abundance make comparison across studies difficult. Taking advantage of the current knowledge, our review identified analytical challenges and suggested appropriate methods on research into microplastic contamination in feces. This work will serve as a valuable information of available analytical methods for examining microplastics in feces and will stimulate further research to advance our understanding of microplastics from feces. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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