Microplastic contamination and fluxes in a touristic area at the SE Gulf of California.

2021 
Abstract Microplastics (MPs) are long-lasting anthropogenic pollutants, observed in all types of natural environments. The MPs abundance and their temporal variability in beach sands, surface waters (manta trawl), and suspended sediments (sediment trap) were assessed in Mazatlan, Mexico, a tourism destination on the northern Pacific coast, under the hypothesis that MP contamination is influenced by rainfall and population density. The MP concentrations in beach sands from urban and rural areas nearby Mazatlan (4–36 MPs m−2) and in surface waters (1.7–2.0 MPs m−3) were comparable between type of sampling sites; whereas the MP fluxes in sediment trap samples varied widely (40–782 MPs m−2 day−1) with highest values during the rainfall season. The MPs recovered were mostly white/clear (48–54%), and the prevailing shapes were fragments in beach sands and surface waters (59–80%), and fibers (75%) in suspended sediments. The synthetic polymers polypropylene, polyethylene, and polyethylene terephthalate were the most abundant in the study area.
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