Effects of environmental and anthropogenic factors on the distribution and abundance of microplastics in freshwater ecosystems

Although microplastics are emerging marine pollutants that have recently attracted increasing attention, it is still difficult to identify their sources. This study reviewed 6487 articles to determine current research trends and found 237 effective concentration points after sorting, which were dist...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2023-01, Vol.856, p.159030-159030, Article 159030
Hauptverfasser: Li, Weixiang, Li, Xin, Tong, Jing, Xiong, Weiping, Zhu, Ziqian, Gao, Xiang, Li, Shuai, Jia, Meiying, Yang, Zhaohui, Liang, Jie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although microplastics are emerging marine pollutants that have recently attracted increasing attention, it is still difficult to identify their sources. This study reviewed 6487 articles to determine current research trends and found 237 effective concentration points after sorting, which were distributed in four regions and related to freshwater ecosystems. Results found that 15 environmental variables represented natural and anthropogenic environmental characteristics, of which seven environmental variables were selected for experimental modelling. Random forest models fitted sample data, thus facilitating the identification of regional microplastics distribution. The global random forest model had random forest importance scores (RFISs) for gross domestic product, population, and the proportion of agricultural land use were 15.76 %, 15.64 %, and 14.74 %, respectively; these indicate that human activities significantly affected the global distribution of microplastics. In Asia, agriculture and urban activities are the main sources of microplastics, with an RFIS of 11.58 % and 12.24 % for the proportion of agricultural and urban land use, respectively. Activities in urban areas were determined to be the main influencing factors in North America, with an RFIS of 13.92 % for the proportion of urban land use. Agricultural activities were the main influencing factors in Europe, with RFISs for the proportion of agricultural land use of 16.90 %. Our results indicate that region-specific policies are required to control microplastics in different regions, with soil composition being a latency factor that affects microplastics' distribution. [Display omitted] •Environmental and anthropogenic factors were combined to explore microplastic distribution.•Management implications were proposed to reduce the risk of regional microplastic.•Evaluation framework for microplastic pollution should include four aspects.•The migration pattern of microplastics in soil should be studied in more detail.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159030