Microplastic
contamination was studied along a freshwater continuum
from inland streams to the Milwaukee River estuary to Lake Michigan
and vertically from the water surface, water subsurface, and sediment.
Microplastics were detected in all 96 water samples and 9 sediment
samples collected. Results indicated a gradient of polymer presence
with depth: low-density particles decreased from the water surface
to the subsurface to sediment, and high-density particles had the
opposite result. Polymer identification results indicated that water
surface and subsurface samples were dominated by low-density polypropylene
particles, and sediment samples were dominated by more dense polyethylene
terephthalate particles. Of the five particle-type categories (fragments,
films, foams, pellets/beads, and fibers/lines), fibers/lines were
the most common particle-type and were present in every water and
sediment sample collected. Fibers represented 45% of all particles
in water samples and were distributed vertically throughout the water
column regardless of density. Sediment samples were dominated by black
foams (66%, identified as styrene–butadiene rubber) and to
a lesser extent fibers/lines (29%) with approximately 89% of all of
the sediment particles coming from polymers with densities greater
than 1.1 g cm–3. Results demonstrated that polymer
density influenced partitioning between the water surface and subsurface
and the underlying surficial sediment and the common practice of sampling
only the water surface can result in substantial bias, especially
in estuarine, harbor, and lake locations where water surface concentrations
tend to overestimate mean water column concentrations.
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