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Microplastics in freshwater and marine ecosystems: Occurrence, characterization, sources, distribution dynamics, fate, transport processes, potential mitigation strategies, and policy interventions

Toheeb Lekan Jolaosho, Mariam Folashade Rasaq, Eniola Victoria Omotoye, Oluwadamilola Victoria Araomo, Opeyemi Shakirat Adekoya, Opeyemi Yusuf Abolaji, Jesuyon Joseph Hungbo

2025Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety132 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Most of the literature on microplastics (MPs) focuses on freshwater or terrestrial ecosystems, frequently overlooking their interconnections with the marine environments. This oversight is worrying given that both ecosystems serve as primary pathways for the introduction of MPs into marine environments. This review synthesizes existing literature on MPs in both freshwater and marine ecosystems across all six continents. The most commonly produced plastic polymers in industry are polyethylene (36 %) and polypropylene (21 %), and studies revealed that these two materials are the most abundant in aquatic ecosystems. Primary and secondary MPs originate from a range of sources including land-based disposal, the ocean, airborne deposition, wastewater treatment facilities, automobiles, pharmaceuticals and personal care products, synthetic textiles, and insect repellents. Notably, secondary MPs, which are formed from the breakdown of larger plastic items comprise approximately 69-81% of marine debris, especially in urbanized, densely populated areas. The inconsistencies of the methodologies (sampling, extraction, and quantification) and the units employed for result presentations are part of the major limitations in MPs research. Environmental phenomena such as heteroaggregation, weathering, adsorption, leaching, and fragmentation are the major factors influencing the behavior, fate, and degradation process of plastic particles. The physicochemical properties of plastic polymers, such as density, crystallinity, as well as bioturbation, meteorological forces, and wind actions, including currents, waves, and tides, are responsible for biofouling, aggregation, sinking into the bottom sediment, resuspension, and the vertical, horizontal, and spatiotemporal distributions and transport of MPs. The potential solutions to mitigate plastic pollution are grounded in the 3Rs framework, which includes reducing production and consumption, advancing the biotechnological, chemical and microbial development of degradable polymers, promoting reusable plastic products with lower environmental impacts over their lifetimes, and recycling waste into new products. The regulatory policies on single-use plastics commonly involve permanent bans and financial penalties for violators. In addition, nations such as the United States, the Netherlands, and northern Europe have introduced economic incentives to encourage the return of reusable materials to reduce plastic waste and the resulting envrionmental pollution.

Topics & Concepts

MicroplasticsEnvironmental scienceMarine ecosystemEcosystemFreshwater ecosystemEcologyBiologyMicroplastics and Plastic PollutionRecycling and Waste Management Techniquesbiodegradable polymer synthesis and properties
Microplastics in freshwater and marine ecosystems: Occurrence, characterization, sources, distribution dynamics, fate, transport processes, potential mitigation strategies, and policy interventions | Litcius