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Discontinuity in fluvial plastic transport increased by floating vegetation
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  • Louise Jeanne Schreyers,
  • Khiet Bui,
  • Tim van Emmerik,
  • Lauren Biermann,
  • Remko Uijlenhoet,
  • Hong Quan Nguyen,
  • Martine J. van der Ploeg
Louise Jeanne Schreyers
Hydrology and Quantitative Water Management Group, Wageningen University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Khiet Bui
Institute for Circular Economy Development, Vietnam National University, Vietnam
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Tim van Emmerik
Hydrology and Quantitative Water Management Group, Wageningen University
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Lauren Biermann
Unknown
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Remko Uijlenhoet
Delft University of Technology
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Hong Quan Nguyen
Institute for Circular Economy Development, Vietnam National University, Vietnam
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Martine J. van der Ploeg
Wageningen University and Research
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Abstract

Understanding plastic mobility in rivers is crucial in estimating plastic emissions into the oceans. Most studies have so far considered fluvial plastic transport as a uniform process, with stream discharge and plastic concentrations as the main variables necessary to quantify plastic transport. Decelerating (e.g.: trapping effects) and accelerating effects (e.g.: increased water flows) on plastic transport are poorly understood, despite growing evidence that such mechanisms affect riverine plastic mobility. In this observation-based study, we explored the roles of an invasive floating plant species (i.e. water hyacinths) as a major disruptor of plastic transport. The different functions of aquatic vegetation in trapping and transporting plastics play a key part in our evolving understanding of how plastic moves in rivers. We collected a one-year dataset on plastic transport, densities and hyacinth abundance in the Saigon river, Vietnam, using both a visual counting method and UAV imagery analysis. We found that hyacinths trap the majority of floating plastic observed (~60%), and plastic densities within patches are ten times higher than otherwise found at the river surface. At a monthly and seasonal scale, high hyacinth coverage coincides with peaks in both plastic transport and densities over the dry season (Dec-May) in the Saigon river. We also investigated the large-scale mechanisms governing plant-plastic-water interactions through a conceptual model based on our observations and available literature. Distinguishing total and net plastic transport is crucial to consider fluctuations in freshwater discharge, tidal dynamics and trapping effects caused by the interactions with aquatic vegetation and/or other sinks.
08 Feb 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
09 Feb 2023Published in ESS Open Archive