4.4 Article

Microplastic pollution in St. Lawrence River sediments

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES
Volume 71, Issue 12, Pages 1767-1771

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/cjfas-2014-0281

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Funding

  1. NSERC

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Although widely detected in marine ecosystems, microplastic pollution has only recently been documented in freshwater environments, almost exclusively in surface waters. Here, we report microplastics (polyethylene microbeads, 0.40-2.16 mm diameter) in the sediments of the St. Lawrence River. We sampled 10 freshwater sites along a 320 km section from Lake St. Francis to Quebec City by passing sediment collected from a benthic grab through a 500 mu m sieve. Microbeads were discovered throughout this section, and their abundances varied by four orders of magnitude across sites. Median and mean (+/- 1 SE) densities across sites were 52 microbeads.m(-2) and 13 832 (+/- 13 677) microbeads.m(-2), respectively. The highest site density was 1.4 x 10(5) microbeads.m(-2) (or 103 microbeads.L-1), which is similar in magnitude to microplastic concentrations found in the world's most contaminated marine sediments. Mean diameter of microbeads was smaller at sites receiving municipal or industrial effluent (0.70 +/- 0.01 mm) than at non-effluent sites (0.98 +/- 0.01 mm), perhaps suggesting differential origins. Given the prevalence and locally high densities of microplastics in St. Lawrence River sediments, their ingestion by benthivorous fishes and macroinvertebrates warrants investigation.

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