An integrated, tiered microplastic workflow, supporting rapid broadscale detection options

Lynch, Samantha K., Johnson, Colin L., Rao, Shivanesh, Loa-Kum-Cheung, Jaimie, Foulsham, Edwina L., Suzzi, Alessandra L., Hill, Lachlan, Doszpot, Neil, Athukorala, Rajitha, Pinto, Uthpala, Vickers, Keegan, Carbery, Maddison, and Santana, Marina F.M. (2025) An integrated, tiered microplastic workflow, supporting rapid broadscale detection options. MethodsX, 15. 103536.

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Abstract

With growing concerns regarding microplastic pollution, there is an urgent need to improve understanding of their presence, distribution, and environmental impacts. This necessitates more coordinated and harmonised large-scale microplastic monitoring initiatives. However, such assessments are traditionally expensive, labour-intensive, and hindered by a lack of standardised sampling and analytical protocols, which impede rapid, yet accurate identification of microplastic sources and ecological risks. To improve environmental microplastic contamination estimates, this study proposes a rapid, cost-effective, and bulk-processing approach within a criteria-driven Tiered Microplastics Workflow (TMW). This approach enables the efficient quantification of microplastic contamination in estuarine surface waters, offering adaptable levels of analytical resolution, that is scalable for environmental monitoring. Key features of the TMW include: • Streamlined processing: sieving, digestion, density separation, vacuum degassing, size-classed filtration, Nile Red staining, and automated fluorescent particle counts via a Python script, enabling 24 samples to be processed in five days. • Rapid Count Method: Enabling microplastic identification in broadscale monitoring within a 20 % error margin. Script-based microplastic counts align with FTIR results (R² = 0.83). • Flexible resolution: Sample processing can be paused and switched to other analytical methods while maintaining data comparability ensuring data harmonisation.

Item ID: 87708
Item Type: Article (Research - C1)
ISSN: 2215-0161
Keywords: Density separation, Estuary, FTIR, Manta net, Monitoring, Nile red, Particles, Plastic, Potassium hydroxide, Rapid count method, Sodium chloride, Vacuum
Copyright Information: Crown Copyright © 2025 Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Date Deposited: 28 Jan 2026 05:24
FoR Codes: 41 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES > 4104 Environmental management > 410404 Environmental management @ 100%
SEO Codes: 18 ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT > 1805 Marine systems and management > 180505 Measurement and assessment of marine water quality and condition @ 100%
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