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Pollution by anthropogenic microfibers in North-West Mediterranean Sea and efficiency of microfiber removal by a wastewater treatment plant

The widespread pollution from the release of microfibers is an emerging concern as they are a potential threat to the environment. Their identification in samples in terms of quantity and pathways remain a challenge as contamination can be a major source of error. A systematic study of synthetic mic...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Science of the total environment 2021-03, Vol.758, p.144195, Article 144195
Main Authors: Pedrotti, M.L., Petit, S., Eyheraguibel, B., Kerros, M.E., Elineau, A., Ghiglione, J.F., Loret, J.F., Rostan, A., Gorsky, G.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The widespread pollution from the release of microfibers is an emerging concern as they are a potential threat to the environment. Their identification in samples in terms of quantity and pathways remain a challenge as contamination can be a major source of error. A systematic study of synthetic microfibers (MFs) has been carried out in different environmental compartments of an urban area and in the surface waters of the northwestern Mediterranean. The quantity, size and type of polymer of MFs were recorded in air, in waste water from a domestic washing machine, at the inlet and outlet of the Haliotis urban wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in Nice (Provence Alpes Côte-d'Azur, France) and in a variety of coastal and offshore areas. The results showed that MFs released by clothes during washing (on average of 13 × 106 MFs per m3) are an important emitter of microplastics. Despite its high removal efficiency (87.5% to 98.5%) by Haliotis, a large number of MFs, estimated at 4.3 billion, enter the marine environment daily from the treatment plant. The attenuated total reflectance Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) characterization of the raw materials showed that 14 to 50% of fibers are synthetic, mostly polyester and polyamide, the remaining 35 to 72% being natural polymers (cotton, wool) or manufactured by processing natural polymers (especially cellulose). MFs were found in all environmental compartments studied and appear to be widespread in coastal and offshore surface waters with concentrations varying from 2.6 × 103 to 3.70 × 104 m−3. The sources of MFs in the marine environment are multiple, with laundry fibers discharges from WWTP and the atmospheric transport of urban fibers are among the main pathways. [Display omitted] •MFs were detected and analyzed in airborne and from urban areas to the open sea.•Contamination can be a major source of error in MFs detection and quantification.•Shed of laundry fibers from WWTP are important sources of MFs in marine environment.•From 14 to 50% of marine MFs were synthetic and most of them were PES and PA.•Impacts of MFs on marine environment should include the atmospheric compartment.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144195