2015-04-10T15:28:39Z
2015-04-10T15:28:39Z
2014-12-15
2015-04-10T15:28:39Z
Marine debris, mostly consisting of plastic, is a global problem, negatively impacting wildlife, tourism and shipping. However, despite the durability of plastic, and the exponential increase in its production, monitoring data show limited evidence of concomitant increasing concentrations in marine habitats. There appears to be a considerable proportion of the manufactured plastic that is unaccounted for in surveys tracking the fate of environmental plastics. Even the discovery of widespread accumulation of microscopic fragments microplastics) in oceanic gyres and shallow water sediments is unable to explain the missing fraction. Here, we show that deep-sea sediments are a likely sink for microplastics. Microplastic, in the form of fibres, was up to four orders of magnitude more abundant (per unit volume) in deep-sea sediments from the Atlantic Ocean, Mediterranean Sea and Indian Ocean than in contaminated sea-surface waters. Our results show evidence for a large and hitherto unknown repository of microplastics. The dominance of microfibres points to a previously underreported and unsampled plastic fraction. Given the vastness of the deep sea and the prevalence of microplastics at all sites we investigated, the deep-sea floor appears to provide an answer to the question where is all the plastic?
Article
Published version
English
Contaminació del mar; Medi ambient; Marine pollution; Environment
The Royal Society
Reproducció del document publicat a: http://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.140317
Royal Society Open Science, 2014, num. 1, p. 140317
http://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.140317
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/287600/EU//PERSEUS
cc-by (c) Woodall, L. et al., 2014
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es