Plastic and microplastic pollutions are known to be widespread across the planet in all types of environments. However, relatively little about microplastic quantities in the deeper areas of the oceans is known, due to the difficulty to reach these environments. In this work, we present an investigation of microplastic (<5 mm) distribution performed in the bottom sediments of the abyssal plain off the coast and the canyon of Toulon (France). Four samples of deep-sea sediment were collected at the depth of 2443 m during the sea operations carried out by the French oceanographic cruises for the KM3NeT project. The chemical and physical characterisation of the sediment was carried out, and items were extracted from sediments by density separation and analysed by optical microscope and µRaman spectroscopy. Results show microplastics in the deep-sea sediments with a concentration of about 80 particles L, confirming the hypothesis of microplastics spread to abyssal sediments in the Mediterranean Sea.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-021-17997-z | DOI Listing |
Mar Pollut Bull
February 2024
Research Institute for Global Change (RIGC), Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), 2-15 Natsushima-cho, Yokosuka, Kanagawa 237-0061, Japan.
J Anal Psychol
November 2022
Zurich, Switzerland.
This article explores the symbolism of plastic pollution. Plastic and microplastic particles are now found everywhere - in the Arctic, in deep ocean trenches, in human organs - and plastic accumulates in our oceans forming gigantic spiral-shaped garbage patches. Both spiral symbolism and E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
September 2022
Coastal and Estuarine Environmental Department, Port and Airport Research Institute, Yokosuka, Japan.
Microplastics (MPs) in the ocean have been widely recognized as causing global marine environmental problems. To gain a quantitative and comprehensive understanding of oceanic MP contamination, detailed numerical Lagrangian particle tracking experiments were conducted to evaluate the regional oceanic transport and dispersal of MPs in the South China Sea (SCS) derived from three major rivers, Pearl (China), Mekong (Vietnam), and Pasig (the Philippines), which are known to discharge large amounts of plastic waste into the SCS. As previous field surveys have suggested, MP contamination spreads from the surface to the deeper ocean in the water column, we thus considered three types of MPs: (1) positively buoyant (light) MPs, (2) positively buoyant (light) MPs with random walk diffusion, and (3) full 3-D tracking of non-buoyant MPs that are passively transported by ambient currents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Chang Biol
May 2022
Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, Florida Atlantic University, Fort Pierce, Florida, USA.
Hundreds of studies have surveyed plastic debris in surface ocean gyre and convergence zones, however, comprehensive microplastics (MPs, ≤5 mm) assessments beneath these surface accumulation areas are lacking. Using in situ high-volume filtration, Manta net and MultiNet sampling, combined with micro-Fourier-transform-infrared imaging, we discovered a high abundance (up to 244.3 pieces per cubic meter [n m ]) of small microplastics (SMPs, characteristically <100 μm) from the surface to near-sea floor waters of the remote South Atlantic Subtropical Gyre.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
February 2022
DIFI, University of Genoa, Via Dodecaneso, 33, 16146, Genoa, Italy.
Plastic and microplastic pollutions are known to be widespread across the planet in all types of environments. However, relatively little about microplastic quantities in the deeper areas of the oceans is known, due to the difficulty to reach these environments. In this work, we present an investigation of microplastic (<5 mm) distribution performed in the bottom sediments of the abyssal plain off the coast and the canyon of Toulon (France).
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