Nearly 269,000 tons of plastic pollution may be floating in the world's
oceans, according to a study published December 10, 2014 in the
open-access journal PLOS ONE by Marcus Eriksen from Five Gyres Institute and colleagues.
Microplastic pollution is found in varying concentrations throughout
the oceans, but estimates of the global abundance and weight of floating
plastics, both micro and macroplastic, lack sufficient data to support
them. To better estimate the total number of plastic particles and their
weight floating in the world's oceans, scientists from six countries
contributed data from 24 expeditions collected over a six-year period
from 2007-2013 across all five sub-tropical gyres, coastal Australia,
Bay of Bengal, and the Mediterranean Sea. The data included information
about microplastics collected using nets and large plastic debris from
visual surveys, which were then used to calibrate an ocean model of
plastic distribution.
Based on the data and model, the authors of the study estimate a
minimum of 5.25 trillion plastic particles weighing nearly 269,000 tons
in the world's oceans. Large plastics appear to be abundant near
coastlines, degrading into microplastics in the 5 subtropical gyres, and
that the smallest microplastics were present in more remote regions,
such as the subpolar gyres, which the authors did not expect. The
distribution of the smallest microplastics in remote regions of the
ocean may suggest that gyres act as 'shredders' of large plastic items
into microplastics, after which they eject them across the ocean.
"Our findings show that the garbage patches in the middle of the five
subtropical gyres are not the final resting places for the world's
floating plastic trash. The endgame for micro-plastic is interactions
with entire ocean ecosystems," says Marcus Eriksen, PhD, Director of
Research for the 5 Gyres Institute.
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