Preliminary Screening for Microplastic Concentrations in the Surface Water of the Ob and Tom Rivers in Siberia, Russia

To date, the largest Russian rivers discharging to the Arctic Ocean remain a “blank spot” on the world map of data on the distribution of microplastics in freshwater systems. This study characterizes the abundance and morphology of microplastics in surface water of the Ob River and its large tributa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2021-01, Vol.13 (1), p.80
Hauptverfasser: Frank, Yulia A., Vorobiev, Egor D., Vorobiev, Danil S., Trifonov, Andrey A., Antsiferov, Dmitry V., Soliman Hunter, Tina, Wilson, Scott P., Strezov, Vladimir
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 80
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 13
creator Frank, Yulia A.
Vorobiev, Egor D.
Vorobiev, Danil S.
Trifonov, Andrey A.
Antsiferov, Dmitry V.
Soliman Hunter, Tina
Wilson, Scott P.
Strezov, Vladimir
description To date, the largest Russian rivers discharging to the Arctic Ocean remain a “blank spot” on the world map of data on the distribution of microplastics in freshwater systems. This study characterizes the abundance and morphology of microplastics in surface water of the Ob River and its large tributary, the Tom River, in western Siberia. The average number of particles for the two rivers ranged from 44.2 to 51.2 items per m3 or from 79.4 to 87.5 μg per m3 in the Tom River and in the Ob River, respectively. Of the recovered microplastics, 93.5% were less than 1 mm in their largest dimension, the largest group (45.5% of total counts) consisted of particles with sizes range 0.30–1.00 mm. Generally, microfragments of irregular shape were the most abundant among the Ob and Tom samples (47.4%) and exceeded microfibers (22.1%), microfilms (20.8%), and microspheres (9.74%) by average counts. Results from this study provide a baseline for understanding the scale of the transport of microplastics by the Ob River system into the Arctic Ocean and add to currently available data on microplastics abundance and diversity in freshwater systems of differing global geographic locations.
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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Abundance
Geographical locations
Laboratories
Membrane filters
Microfibers
Microplastics
Microspheres
Oxidation
Polar environments
Rivers
Surface water
Sustainability
title Preliminary Screening for Microplastic Concentrations in the Surface Water of the Ob and Tom Rivers in Siberia, Russia
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