The Borneo Post

Clues emerge in ‘missing’ ocean plastics conundrum

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VIENNA: It’s a puzzle that has perplexed scientists for years: humanity dumps millions of tonnes of plastics into the world’s oceans annually, yet only a tiny fraction remains visible on the surface.

Now an internatio­nal team of researcher­s believe they may be closer to determinin­g where Earth’s ‘missing plastics’ end up, using an unpreceden­ted global effort to track and draw down one of the most polluting materials ever invented.

As images of plastic- clogged beaches and swirling gyres of detritus bobbing on the high seas are prompting government­s and cities to curb their throwaway culture, a growing body of evidence suggests a deeper problem of plastic permeating all ocean depths.

Of the between 4-12 million tonnes that enter the oceans each year, just 250 thousand tonnes are thought to stay at the surface. Overall, more than 99 per cent of plastics dumped at sea over several decades are currently unaccounte­d for.

As plastics degrade through erosion, UV light and microbial decay, their density changes, putting them at the mercy of ocean currents — and, once they get pulled lower in the water, much harder for experts to track.

“It’s quite difficult to decide where it all is because there are so many processes at work,” Alethea Mountford, from Newcastle University’s School of Natural and Environmen­tal Sciences, told AFP.

“Even plastic at the surface can sink down and go back up again — it’s moving between different possible sinks in different areas of the ocean at any time.”

In a potential breakthrou­gh, Mountford used a computer model of ocean currents for plastics of three different densities to project where most of the world’s fragments collect once they start to sink.

The model showed significan­t build ups at depths varying thousands of metres in the Mediterran­ean Sea, Indian Ocean and the waters surroundin­g Southeast Asia.

Much of the plastic ends up on the seabed — as researcher­s outlined earlier this year in a separate study that found microplast­ic fibres in the guts of tiny shrimp that live at the bottom of the Mariana Trench — the deepest place on Earth. — AFP

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