| Literature DB >> 31537881 |
Tim van Emmerik1,2, Emilie Strady3,4,5, Thuy-Chung Kieu-Le3,6, Luan Nguyen3, Nicolas Gratiot3,4.
Abstract
Marine plastic pollution is an increasing environmental threat. Although it is assumed that most marine plastics are transported from land to the ocean through rivers, only limited data on riverine plastic transport exists. Recently, new methods have been introduced to characterize riverine plastics consistently through time and space. For example, combining visual counting observations and plastic debris sampling can provide order of magnitude estimations of plastic transport through a river. In this paper, we present findings from multi-season measurement campaign in the Saigon River, Vietnam. For the first time, we demonstrate that macroplastic transport exhibits strong temporal variation. The monthly averaged plastic transport changes up to a factor five within the measurement period. As it is unclear what drives the variation in plastic transport, relations between rainfall, river discharge, presence of organic material and plastic transport have been explored. Furthermore, we present new findings on the cross-sectional and vertical distribution of riverine plastic transport. With this paper we present new insights in the origin and fate of riverine plastic transport, emphasizing the severity of the emerging thread of plastic pollution on riverine ecosystems.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31537881 PMCID: PMC6753078 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-50096-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) Composition of sampled plastic per month, and (B) plastic content of total sampled debris per month in 2018, based on the net samples.
Figure 2Plastic composition based on mass and item count (N = 3057), determined from net sampling.
Figure 3Particle size distribution in respect to cumulative occurrence and cumulative mass (N = 3057), determined from net sampling.
Characteristics of the used trawls.
| Trawl | Dimensions | Sampled layers | Net mesh size | Sampling period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surface only | Layer 1: 1 × 0.5 m | 1: 0–0.5 m | 4 cm | March–December 2018 |
| 2-layer | Layer 1: 0.67 × 0.6 m | 1: 0–0.5 m | 3 cm | July–December 2018 |
| Layer 2: 0.67 × 0.5 m | 2: 0.5–1.0 m | |||
| 3-layer | Layer 1: 0.67 × 0.6 m | 1: 0–0.5 m | 3 cm | July 2018 |
| Layer 2: 0.67 × 0.4 m | 2: 0.5–0.9 m | |||
| Layer 3: 0.67 × 0.4 m | 3: 0.9–1.3 m |
Figure 4Cross-sectional distribution of plastic transport during (A) ebb tide and (B) flood tide, based on visual counting.
Figure 5Vertical distribution of plastic items sampled using A. 2- and B. 3-layer trawls.
Figure 6(A) Plastic transport and organic debris, (B) monthly mean discharge and precipitation, (C) percentage ebb and flood tide flow, and (D) monthly mean plastic outflow and tidal range.
Yearly emission in items/year and in t/y based on 2018 observations.
| Mean hourly | Annual | Mass per particle | Annual | Vertical | Annual transport | Fraction | Annual transport [total] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.7 × 103 items/h | 5.0 × 107 items/y | 1.9 × 10−2 kg/item | 9.5 × 102 t/y | 88.1% [0–0.5 m] 7.2% [0.5–0.9 m] 4.7% [0.9–1.3 m] | 1.1 × 103 t/y | 66–79% | 1.4–1.6 × 103 t/y |
Figure 7Conceptual model for estimating total plastic transport.