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The contamination of microplastics (MP) in freshwater environments represent a major way for the MP transport in the environment. The assessment of MP pollution in freshwater compartments is then important to visualize the pressure and the impacts on medium, and to set up necessary measures. In this context, this study focused on the influence of anthropogenic activities of a medium French city (Angers) on MP levels in samples collected from the Loire River, the longest river in France. Abiotic and biotic matrices were collected upstream and downstream Angers. A first analysis was performed based on microscopy to determine the size, colour and shape of suspected MP and a complementary analysis by μ-FTIR (micro-Fourier Transform InfraRed) was conducted to determine the composition of plastic particles. Three organisms belonging to different trophic levels were studied: when the MP level was expressed per individual, the lowest abundance of MP was found in Tubifex sp. Followed by Corbicula fluminea, while the highest was measured in Anguilla anguilla. To establish the relationship with their habitat, the presence of MP in sediment and water was also analysed. Therefore, this works constitutes a complete overview of the MP levels in freshwater abiotic and biotic matrices. Overall, the presence of MP in analysed samples did not follow a particular pattern, neither in the sites nor matrices: the characteristics depending on a multifactorial outcome (feeding mode, organism size …). However, correlation of MP pattern between clams and sediment was quite evident, while the one between worms and their habitat was not. This demonstrates the relevance of investigating plastic contamination both in biotic and abiotic matrices. Finally, a standardisation of sampling and analytical analysis protocols would be helpful to make comparisons between studies more robust.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122167 | DOI Listing |
Sci Total Environ
September 2025
Université Gustave Eiffel, LEE (Laboratoire Eau et Environnement), Nantes, France.
Microplastics (MPs) are often detected in river sediment, but the processes that lead to their long-term archiving need more investigation. In this study, the evolution of MPs buried in sediments was explored in a river segment with a diversity of deposition conditions. Two cores were collected on a high island -flooded only during overbank episodes- and in a semi-active channel also flooded during moderate-water periods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
May 2025
Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia.
Anthropogenic biodiversity decline threatens the functioning of ecosystems and the many benefits they provide to humanity. As well as causing species losses in directly affected locations, human influence might also reduce biodiversity in relatively unmodified vegetation if far-reaching anthropogenic effects trigger local extinctions and hinder recolonization. Here we show that local plant diversity is globally negatively related to the level of anthropogenic activity in the surrounding region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
December 2024
Université Gustave Eiffel, LEE (Laboratoire Eau et Environnement), Nantes, France.
Microplastics (MP) have been reported in many rivers across the globe but their depositional and archiving mechanisms in sediments are not fully understood yet. The aim of this study was to identify potential controlling factors of MP spatial distribution in surface sediment after a characterisation (sediment composition, hydrological conditions, sedimentary environment) of 14 sampling sites in an 8 km segment of the Loire river. Samples were collected from 3 sedimentary environments (sandbars, riverbanks and semi-active channels) with diverse flooding frequencies, grain size distributions and total organic carbon (TOC) contents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
December 2024
Univ Brest - CNRS - IRD - Ifremer, UMR 6539 LEMAR, IUEM-Université de Bretagne Occidentale, Rue Dumont D'Urville, 29280, Plouzané, France.
Sci Total Environ
December 2024
METIS - Milieux environnementaux, transferts et interactions dans les hydrosystèmes et les sols, UMR 7619, Sorbonne Université, 75252 Paris, France.
Environmental imprint of inorganic fertilizer uses was assessed over the last hundred years at the downstream part of large French rivers (Loire, Moselle, Rhine, Rhone, Meuse and Seine rivers) based on Potassium-40 (K) activity concentration data sets acquired from soil monitoring (1980-2022) and from sediment coes collected from 2020 to 2022 to reconstruct the temporal trajectories of K activity concentrations since the beginning of the last century. Cultivated soils were significantly enriched in K compared to non-cultivated ones in the 1980s and 1990s when they turned back to the contents of non-cultivated soils during the following decades. In riverine sediments, all the rivers displayed close K temporal trajectories with peaking K contents in fine grain size sediments in the 1980s.
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