“…A variety of methods have been applied to isolate nano-or microplastic from the samples for plastic analyses. These include density separations with varying types and concentrations of salts, sieving, removal of organic matter with acids, bases, peroxide and enzymes (or combinations thereof) and drying or decomposing samples at different temperatures (Hermsen et al, 2017;Hidalgo-Ruz, Gutow, Thompson, & Thiel, 2012;K€ uhn et al, 2017;Lusher, Welden, Sobral, & Cole, 2017;Rocha-Santos & Duarte, 2015;Song et al, 2015;Van Cauwenberghe, Devriese, Galgani, Robbens, & Janssen, 2015). These methods differ in the extent to which particles other than plastic are removed, the likelihood of contamination of the samples with procedural plastic particles from materials used or the work space (Foekema et al, 2013;Torre, Digka, Anastasopoulou, Tsangaris, & Mytilineou, 2016), but also in the extent to which plastic particles that are present in the environmental samples are retained in the samples.…”