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February 15, 2021

Method for temporal monitoring of microplastic sedimentation

Microplastics have been found in nearly all organisms and habitats everywhere in the world. Credit: UEF/ Raija Törrönen
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Microplastics have been found in nearly all organisms and habitats everywhere in the world. Credit: UEF/ Raija Törrönen

The effects of microplastics on our health and the environment are being rigorously studied all across the world. Researchers are identifying microplastic sources and their potential routes to the environment by examining rainwater, wastewater, and soil.

Microplastics have been found in nearly all organisms and habitats everywhere in the world. However, factors contributing to the influx and accumulation of microplastics in water ecosystems aren't fully understood yet. The focus of microplastics research has, for a long , been on the age of microplastics found in sediments, and on the time it takes to accumulate there. So far, however, temporal changes in sedimentation haven't really been considered in microplastics research.

Researchers in Finland (University of Eastern Finland, University of Turku, University of Helsinki) have tested the trap method to analyze annual accumulation rates and possible seasonal variation. The sediment trap was installed on the lake bottom in the deepest part of the basin. Microplastics sink to the bottom of the basin together with other , and they accumulate in sediment that are emptied on a regular basis. The sediment trap itself is a well-established method for sedimentological studies. The main focus in the development of the method was on the isolation of samples from sediment, and on testing the method's feasibility in a body of water.

The researchers tested the method in the basin of Huruslahti Bay, Finland, in 2017–2018. The annual amount of microplastics accumulating in the sediment of Huruslahti Bay was 32,400 pieces per square meter in a year. The most important advantage of the method is that it can be used to determine the time it takes from microplastics to enter and accumulate in bodies of water. Time plays an important role when modeling the influx and accumulation of microplastics, as well as in predicting any environmental risks they might cause in the future.

The study was published in Environmental Pollution.

More information: Saija Saarni et al. Sediment trapping – An attempt to monitor temporal variation of microplastic flux rates in aquatic systems, Environmental Pollution (2021).

Journal information: Environmental Pollution

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