Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2025

Presentation information

[E] Oral

H (Human Geosciences ) » H-CG Complex & General

[H-CG19] Microplastics & Micro-pollutants in the Environment - The 3Ts

Wed. May 28, 2025 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM Exhibition Hall Special Setting (2) (Exhibition Hall 7&8, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Christopher A Gomez(Kobe University Faculty of Maritime Sciences Volcanic Risk at Sea Research Group), King-Fai Li(University of California Riverside), Lin Tan(University of California, Riverside), Candide Lissak(Universite de Rennes ), Chairperson:Lin Tan(University of California, Riverside), King-Fai Li(University of California Riverside), Candide Lissak(Universite de Rennes), Christopher A Gomez(Kobe University Faculty of Maritime Sciences Volcanic Risk at Sea Research Group)

3:35 PM - 4:00 PM

[HCG19-01] Microplastic Transport from Rivers to Coastal Oceans

★Invited Papers

*Andrew B Gray1,2, Clare Murphy-Hagan1, Samiksha Singh1,3, Win Cowger1,4, Hannah Hapich1, John Perna1, Haley Johnson1, Oluniyi Fadare1 (1.University of California, Riverside, USA, 2.Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, IWU, Germany, 3.Gauteng City-Region Observatory (GCRO), South Africa, 4.The Moore Institute for Plastic Pollution Research, USA)

Keywords:plastic, pollution, sampling, suspended sediment, marine, estuary

Most of the microplastics entering the ocean are discharged from rivers. Thus, the overland cascade of microplastics from terrestrial sources through riverine, estuarine, and coastal marine environments is a critical component of the global microplastics cycle. Although efforts to monitor this cascade have proliferated over the past decade, sparse field data and abundant knowledge gaps concerning transport dynamics continue to hamper the advancement of numerical models. In this presentation, we will overview the challenges and opportunities facing the microplastics research community's approach to process-based monitoring of these systems, highlight some of our recent findings, and discuss ongoing needs. In river systems, we will address the issues of isokinetic sampling, concentration dependence on discharge, position in the flow field, antecedent hydrologic conditions, and time in the context of effective discharge. In estuaries and coastal marine systems, we will discuss the role of effective particle size and character in the context of local hydrodynamics and sediment deposition regimes. Across all aquatic compartments, meeting the challenge of representative monitoring continues to be of paramount importance.