The Scotsman

An apple a day could include dose of plastic, studies show

● Research finds fruit and vegetables contaminat­ed with plastic fragments

- By ILONA AMOS Environmen­t Correspond­ent iamos@scotsman.com

Tiny fragments of waste plastic have been found inside carrots, apples, turnips, lettuce and wheat plants, new internatio­nal research shows.

The discovery raises concerns over the safety of the food we eat and sparks new calls for studies on the impact of ingesting plastics on human health.

For decades scientists have believed that plastic particles are too large to pass through the physical barriers of intact plant tissue.

However, the findings from two new studies published this week cast doubt on the theory, with fruit, root vegetable and leafy crops revealed to be most at risk of microplast­ic contaminat­ion.

According to Margherita Ferrante, a scientist at Italy’s University of Catania, apples are the most susceptibl­e fruits, while carrots are the vegetables most affected.

Meanwhile, a collaborat­ion between Dutch and Chinese researcher­s is set to reveal plastic is being sucked up with water through the root systems of food crops such as lettuce and wheat, then transporte­d to the edible plant parts.

Previous research has revealed that a third of Ukcaught fish, including cod, haddock, mackerel and shellfish, contain plastic.

Estimates suggest lovers of shellfish are eating up to 11,000 plastic fragments in their seafood each year.

This is just a fraction of the total amount, with the average person thought to ingest at least 50,000 microplast­ic particles annually and breathe in a similar quantity.

True levels are likely to be many times higher, as only a small number of foods and drinks have been analysed for plastic contaminat­ion.

Both new studies have been shared with the Plastic Health Coalition ahead of a key summit looking into the relationsh­ip between plastic and health, being held in Amsterdam in April 2021.

The findings pose serious questions over the safety of the food we eat., campaigner­s say

Maria Westerbos, founder of the Plastic Soup Foundation, which is organising the event, said: “For years we have known about plastic in crustacean­s and fish, but this is the first time we have known about plastic getting into vegetables.

“If it is getting into vegetables, it is getting into everything that eats vegetables as well, which means it is in our meat and dairy as well.

“What we need to find out now is what this is doing to us.

“This is unchartere­d territory. Does plastic make us sick?”

Sian Sutherland, co-founder of environmen­tal campaign group A Plastic Planet, said: “Plastics are in our air, ocean and soil. And now, finally, we have the proof plastics are in the fruit and vegetables we feed to our children.

“But a five-a-day diet of toxic microplast­ics and chemicals is not what the doctor ordered.”

 ??  ?? 0 Fruit, root vegetable and leafy crops revealed to be most at risk of microplast­ic contaminat­ion
0 Fruit, root vegetable and leafy crops revealed to be most at risk of microplast­ic contaminat­ion

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