Microplastics and plastisphere at surface waters in the Southwestern Caribbean sea
2024; Elsevier BV; Volume: 358; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120745
ISSN1095-8630
AutoresPaulo César Tigreros-Benavides, Luis Garzón-Rodríguez, Gysseth Herrera-Villarraga, Jesús Ochoa-Mogollón, Camila Sarmiento-Sánchez, Luz Helena Rodríguez-Vargas, Gladys Rozo-Torres, Paula Guayán-Ruíz, Adolfo Sanjuan-Muñoz, Andrés Franco-Herrera,
Tópico(s)biodegradable polymer synthesis and properties
ResumoPollution generated by plastic waste has brought an environmental problem characterized by the omnipresence of smaller pieces of this material known as microplastics (MP). This issue was addresses by collecting samples with 250 μm pore size nets in two marine-coastal sectors of Southwestern Caribbean Sea during two contrasting seasons. Higher concentrations were found in rainy season than in dry season, reaching respectively 1.72 MP/m3 and 0.22 MP/m3. Within each sector, there were differences caused firstly by localities of higher concentrations of semi-closed water bodies localities during rainy season (Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta and La Caimanera marsh), and secondly by lower concentrations of localities with less influenced of flow rates during dry season (Salamanca and Isla Fuerte). Moreover, the lowest concentration in dry season corresponding to La Caimanera marsh reflects how the community environmental management might decrease MP pollution. In both sectors and seasons, the particles of 0.3 mm (0.3–1.4 mm) size class dominated over those of 1.4 mm (1.4–5.0 mm) (reaching each respectively 1.33 MP/m3 and 0.39 MP/m3), with a dominance of fibers, except in the rainy season in Magdalena, where they were films. Using the FTIR technique, polypropylene was identified as the most abundant polymer in both sectors. The composition of the assemblage of microorganisms attached to microplastics presented higher richness and differed from that of free-living planktonic microbes. The most abundant members of the plastisphere were proteobacteria whose major representation was the pathogenic genus Vibrio, while the cyanobacteria dominated in seawater samples.
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