Laboratoire Eau Environnement et Systèmes Urbains (Leesu)

Recent publications

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915.
titre
Small-Size Microplastics in Urban Stormwater Runoff are Efficiently Trapped in a Bioretention Cell
auteur
Kelsey Smyth, Shuyao Tan, Tim van Seters, Johnny Gasperi, Rachid Dris, Jennifer Drake, Elodie Passeport
article
, 2024, ⟨10.1021/acsestwater.4c00037⟩
titre
Comprehensive analysis of a widely pharmaceutical, furosemide, and its degradation products in aquatic systems: Occurrence, fate, and ecotoxicity
auteur
Fidji Sandré, Régis Moilleron, Christophe Morin, Laure Garrigue-Antar
article
, 2024, 348, pp.123799. ⟨10.1016/j.envpol.2024.123799⟩
titre
Time-varying microplastic contributions of a large urban and industrial area to river sediments
auteur
E. Dhivert, J. Pruvost, T. Winiarski, Johnny Gasperi, F. Delor-Jestin, Bruno Tassin, B. Mourier
article
, 2024, 347, pp.123702. ⟨10.1016/j.envpol.2024.123702⟩
titre
Comparative Microplastic Analysis in Urban Waters Using μ-FTIR And Py-GC-MS: A Case Study in Amsterdam
auteur
Feride Öykü Sefiloglu, Cleo Stratmann, Marthinus Brits, Martin J.M. van Velzen, Quinn Groenewoud, A. Dick Vethaak, Rachid Dris, Johnny Gasperi, Marja Lamoree
article
, 2024, pp.124088. ⟨10.1016/j.envpol.2024.124088⟩
titre
COVID lockdown significantly impacted microplastic bulk atmospheric deposition rates
auteur
Max Beaurepaire, Johnny Gasperi, Bruno Tassin, Rachid Dris
article
, 2024, 344, pp.123354. ⟨10.1016/j.envpol.2024.123354⟩

Supervisory authorities

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Public Broadcasting Service: "Fabric microfibers dumped into the ocean"

by Daniel Thevenot - published on , updated on

Public Broadcasting Service: "This New York river dumps millions of fabric microfibers into the ocean daily" : 29 August 2017

By Teresa L. Carey

The faded, “distressed look” of a favorite pair of blue jeans, may come with a hidden price for the residents of New York.

The Hudson River dumps 300 million clothing fibers into the Atlantic Ocean each day, according to a recent study in the Marine Pollution Bulletin. Many of the fibers come from aging clothes, rinsed out with the laundry and into the environment. Approximately half of the fibers were plastic, while the remainder were spun from natural materials like cotton or wool. Invisible to the naked eye, these fibers can cause health problems for animals and humans.


Les travaux du LEESU sur les microplastiques sont cités dans cet article en ligne.

...

After a microfiber study of the Seine River in 2014, Bruno Tassin, an urban hydrologist at University of Paris-Est, faced the same dilemma: tons of pollution without definitive point source. So he conducted a follow-up in Paris in 2016 to determine if microfibers clouded the atmosphere. Tassin found that three to ten tons of microfibers rain out of the air onto the 1,098-square-mile region surrounding Paris, each year.

“We don’t know how they move through the air. There is a probable link between production and fallout, but we don’t know precisely,” said Tassin. But Tassin thinks other sources, such as ground runoff, might still play a role.

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View online : Public Broadcasting Service: "This New York river dumps millions of fabric microfibers into the ocean daily" : 29 August 2017