Presenter: Lotus Carlson
Faculty Sponsor: Baoshan Xing
School: UMass Amherst
Research Area: Environmental Science and Sustainability
Session: Poster Session 6, 4:15 PM - 5:00 PM, Auditorium, A58
ABSTRACT
Created from physical, chemical, and biological weathering of plastics, microplastics (MPs) are an emerging environmental and public health concern. Due to high population, traffic, and industrial activity, urban areas are particularly prone to MPs pollution. Urban forests provide vital ecosystem functions like carbon sequestration, air pollution remediation, cooling, and habitat provisioning. When deposited on tree leaves, MPs can negatively impact leaf morphology, physiology, and biochemistry. Although several studies have investigated MPs deposition on urban tree leaves, none to my knowledge explored the context of urbanization and forest fragmentation together. Hence, the purpose of this project is to analyze the abundance and types of MPs on the leaves of two tree species, white pine (Pinus strobus) and oak (Quercus spp.), collected from one urban site (Arnold Arboretum; AA) and one rural site (Harvard Forest; HF) on the Urban New England (UNE) project, a 120-km urbanization gradient beginning in urban Boston, MA. The results will reveal how both urbanization and forest fragmentation affect foliar MPs deposition. Laser-direct infrared spectroscopy (LD-IR) will be used to identify MPs polymer types and quantify MPs abundance. The hypotheses are: 1) MPs abundance increases as the degree of urbanization level increases, 2) MPs abundance is higher on forest edges than in forest interiors, and 3) MPs varieties reflect site characteristics. This study is expected to provide new understanding on the spatial patterns of MPs deposition.RELATED ABSTRACTS