Applied Sciences (May 2020)

Microplastic Contamination of Surface Water-Sourced Tap Water in Hong Kong—A Preliminary Study

  • Theresa Wing Ling Lam,
  • Hiu Tung Ho,
  • Anson T.H. Ma,
  • Lincoln Fok

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app10103463
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. 3463

Abstract

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Microplastics have been documented in a wide range of commercially available food products, and the presence of microplastics in tap water has received considerable attention in recent years. Although microplastics in drinking water pose a low concern for human health at current levels of exposure, there is a need to understand the potential pathways for human microplastic exposure. With the application of Rose Bengal staining, microplastics in 110 surface water-sourced tap water samples from urban sources in Hong Kong were qualified and morphologically characterized. A total of 224 items were identified in 86 (78.2%) samples with a mean concentration of 2.181 ± 0.165 n L−1. Fibrous and smaller (<1 mm) microplastics predominated in samples, accounting for 97.8% and 65.1% of the total microplastic count, respectively. Our results indicated a comparatively low level of microplastic contamination of tap water in Hong Kong. The potential sources of microplastics could be microplastic-polluted water bodies, atmospheric input and mechanical abrasion of plastic equipment during water treatment and distribution.

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