(Press-News.org) MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL (12/19/2024) — A first-of-its-kind study from researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities shows how remote sensing can help monitor and remove plastic debris from freshwater environments like the Mississippi River.
The research, published in Nature, a peer-reviewed scientific journal, helps to increase the understanding of plastic debris behavior in freshwater environments.
Plastic pollution in oceans continues to be a growing environmental issue, with the United Nations Environment Programme naming it one of the leading pollution challenges. But, plastic pollution in lakes and rivers, or freshwater environments, has garnered less attention.
That is something the researchers wanted to change, because much of the plastic debris in oceans makes its way there through rivers. Previous studies in removing plastic waste use labor-intensive sampling, which can be time-consuming and expensive.
To help with those challenges, this study used remote sensing technology that can provide cost-effective solutions and reach a wider area. The technology uses spectral reflectance properties, or wavelengths in the electromagnetic spectrum, to pinpoint specific types of plastic. It’s important to find the specific wavelength of the plastic materials, so that the sensing technology can filter out materials found naturally in freshwater environments, such as seaweed, sediments, driftwood, and water foams.
“We could use this technology to identify different types of plastics in the water simultaneously. This is key information that we need when employing other technology, like drones, to capture and remove plastic debris in natural environments,” said Mohammadali Olyaei, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geo- Engineering and lead author on the paper.
Conducting their research at the St. Anthony Falls Laboratory allowed the researchers to use actual conditions of the Mississippi River to test their theory since the river runs through the laboratory space. The researchers used a combination of a remote sending platform (spectroradiometer) and a digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) camera to monitor and classify various types of debris, based on their spectral signatures, which can aid in effectively removing plastic debris.
“If we can develop technology at the Mississippi headwaters, in a place like Minnesota, to catch plastic debris, we can protect the downstream states and the entire ocean from plastic pollution. As soon as these plastics begin to spread more and more, their control becomes more and more challenging,” said Ardeshir Ebtehaj, Associate Professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geo- Engineering and corresponding author of the study.
The researchers hope to continue this on a larger scale to increase their understanding of where this plastic debris comes from, how it moves across river systems, and how they can remove it.
In addition to Olyaei and Ebtehaj, the team included Christopher R. Ellis, a senior research associate at the St. Anthony Falls Laboratory.
This work was funded by the Minnesota Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund (ENTRF) as recommended by the Legislative-Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources (LCCMR). The ENRTF is a permanent fund in Minnesota that provides funding for the protection and conservation of Minnesota's natural resources.
Read the entire research paper titled, “A Hyperspectral Reflectance Database of Plastic Debris with Different Fractional Abundance in River Systems,” visit Nature’s website.
END
First-of-its-kind study uses remote sensing to monitor plastic debris in rivers and lakes
Remote sensing creates a cost-effective solution to monitoring plastic pollution
2024-12-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
This prototype sunscreen protects your skin and cools you off, too
2024-12-19
Wearing sunscreen is important to protect your skin from the harmful effects of UV radiation but doesn’t cool people off. However, a new formula, described in ACS’ Nano Letters, protects against both UV light and heat from the sun using radiative cooling. The prototype sunblock kept human skin up to 11 degrees Fahrenheit (6 degrees Celsius) cooler than bare skin, or around 6 F (3 C) cooler than existing sunscreens.
Radiative cooling involves either reflecting or radiating heat away from something, cooling whatever’s underneath. It is already used to create cooling fabrics and coatings that could both cool and ...
Access to vaccines and clinical trials for pregnant women vital in pandemics
2024-12-19
The vast majority of women who contract bird flu during pregnancy and their unborn baby will die from the virus, according to a new study. And the findings stress the importance of early inclusion of pregnant women in public health vaccination programs during pandemics.
The research, led by Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI), recommends that as human cases of avian influenza viruses A (H5N1 and H5N2) increase, an awareness around the vulnerability of pregnant women to a new pandemic is urgently needed.
The systematic review of more than 1500 research ...
Effect of somatosensory electrical stimulation on hand choice
2024-12-19
Hand choice is an unconscious decision frequently made in daily life, whether it's reaching for an object such as a cup or performing any other task. This decision is influenced by target-related information, such as the location, shape, and orientation of the object. However, the selection probability for each hand reaches equilibrium when the target-related factors are similar for the left and right hands. Recent findings suggest that hand choice in such ambiguous situations is biased by prior information before the target presentation. One such factor is prior somatosensory stimulation on one wrist, which likely affects brain activity, enhancing the likelihood ...
The surprising role of gut infection in Alzheimer’s disease
2024-12-19
Arizona State University and Banner Alzheimer’s Institute researchers, along with their collaborators, have discovered a surprising link between a chronic gut infection caused by a common virus and the development of Alzheimer’s disease in a subset of people.
It is believed most humans are exposed to this virus — called cytomegalovirus or HCMV — during the first few decades of life. Cytomegalovirus is one of nine herpes viruses, but it is not considered a sexually transmitted disease. The virus is usually ...
Allen Institute announces 2024 Next Generation Leaders
2024-12-19
Seattle, WASH.—December 19, 2024—Today, the Allen Institute announced eight distinguished scientists who will make up the 2024 Next Generation Leaders (NGL) in bioscience cohort. New this year, the program has expanded beyond neuroscience to welcome researchers from the fields of bioengineering, chemistry, and medicine. Their diverse and impressive range of research expertise includes social cognition, music mindfulness, and psychedelics, to using computational machine learning methods for single-cell omics to study inflammatory disease.
The program is run out of the Allen Institute’s Learning, ...
Graz University of Technology develops modular timber high-rise building for resource-efficient construction
2024-12-19
The operating life and life span of buildings are often far apart. If a property is no longer fit for purpose, it is usually demolished even though it would still be perfectly usable. Even in the event of damage to individual parts of the building, the entire building usually has to make way. This is because in most cases it is cheaper to build a new building than to carry out a conversion or renovation of the existing one. However, this approach does not conserve resources. In the MOHOHO project, an interdisciplinary team from the Institute of Architectural Technology and the Institute of Timber Engineering ...
Research alert: New software unlocks secrets of cell signaling
2024-12-19
Researchers at University of California San Diego have developed and tested a new software package, called Spatial Modeling Algorithms for Reactions and Transport (SMART), that can realistically simulate cell-signaling networks — the complex systems of molecular interactions that allow cells to respond to diverse cues from their environment. Cell-signaling networks involve many distinct steps and are also greatly influenced by the complex, three-dimensional shapes of cells and subcellular components, making them difficult to simulate with existing tools. SMART offers a solution to this problem, which could help accelerate research in fields across ...
A user manual for yeast’s genetic switches
2024-12-19
When introducing genes into yeast to make it produce drugs and other useful substances, it is also necessary to reliably switch the production on or off. A Kobe University team found three gene regulation design principles that provide a flexible guideline for the effective control of microbiological production.
It’s said that DNA is the blueprint of life, telling our cells what to produce. But DNA also contains the switches telling those cells when to produce something and how much of it. Therefore, when introducing new genes into cells to produce useful chemicals such ...
More people living without running water in US cities since the global financial crisis
2024-12-19
More American cities – even those seen as affluent – are home to people living without running water as people are being ‘squeezed’ by unaffordable housing and the cost-of-living crisis, new research finds.
Published in Nature Cities, the study revealed the problem worsened following changes to the housing market triggered by the 2008 global crash. And since 2017 it has been “expanding in scope and severity” to affect a broader array of US cities including Portland (OR), Phoenix, Houston, Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Philadelphia, as well as large urban areas such as Los Angeles, New York City and San Francisco.
The research ...
Study finds slowing of age-related declines in older adults
2024-12-19
A new study from the Robert N. Butler Columbia Aging Center at the Mailman School of Public Health reveals significant improvements in the health of older adults in England when compared to previous generations. Rather than considering health through the presence or absence of disease, the study, published in Nature Aging, applied a new approach that examined trends in people’s functioning – their cognitive, locomotor, psychological, and sensory capacities.
Using data from the English Longitudinal Study ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Genetic discovery links new gene to autism spectrum disorder
Chemistry: Algorithm can sniff out whisky’s strongest notes and origin
Researchers develop personalized stem cell model ALS for fast, individualized drug testing
Evolutionary study reveals the toxic reach of disease-causing bacteria across the Plant Kingdom
Cold-related deaths in the US
Brief outpatient rehabilitation program for post–COVID-19 condition
Racial and ethnic differences in outcomes of neonates born at less than 30 weeks’ gestation
Physical activity during pregnancy and preterm birth among women with gestational diabetes
Developmental disorder discovery could lead to better treatments for Rett syndrome
Laser-based artificial neuron mimics nerve cell functions at lightning speed
Empowering young scientists to build a sustainable future
New review explores advances in alcohol-associated liver disease
Reducing dose of popular blood thinners may limit risk of future bleeding
How to deal with narcissists at home and at work
First-of-its-kind study uses remote sensing to monitor plastic debris in rivers and lakes
This prototype sunscreen protects your skin and cools you off, too
Access to vaccines and clinical trials for pregnant women vital in pandemics
Effect of somatosensory electrical stimulation on hand choice
The surprising role of gut infection in Alzheimer’s disease
Allen Institute announces 2024 Next Generation Leaders
Graz University of Technology develops modular timber high-rise building for resource-efficient construction
Research alert: New software unlocks secrets of cell signaling
A user manual for yeast’s genetic switches
More people living without running water in US cities since the global financial crisis
Study finds slowing of age-related declines in older adults
Tinkering with the “clockwork” mechanisms of life
Machine psychology – a bridge to general AI
Walking speed as a simple predictor of metabolic health in obese individuals
Houston Methodist scientists make surprising discovery pinpointing when good cholesterol becomes harmful
Shiitake-derived functional food shows suppression of liver fibrosis progression
[Press-News.org] First-of-its-kind study uses remote sensing to monitor plastic debris in rivers and lakesRemote sensing creates a cost-effective solution to monitoring plastic pollution