Western Mail

Is anywhere on Earth safe from the menace of plastic pollution?

Pristine Antarctic fjords contain similar levels of microplast­ics to open oceans near large industrial societies, alarming new research has found. What are the implicatio­ns for the delicate ecosystems in our oceans?

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IN THE middle of the last century, mass-produced, disposable plastic waste started washing up on shorelines, and to be found in the middle of the oceans.

This has since become an increasing­ly serious problem, spreading globally to even the most remote places on Earth. Just a few decades later, in the 1970s, scientists found the same problem was occurring at a much less visible, microscopi­c level, with microplast­ics.

These particles of plastic are between 0.05mm and 5mm in size. Larger pieces of plastic can be broken down into microplast­ics but these tiny bits of plastic also come from deliberate additions to all sorts of products, from toothpaste to washing power.

Now, with major global sampling efforts, it has become clear that microplast­ics are dispersing all over the world – in the water column, sediments, and marine animal diets – even reaching as far south as the pristine environmen­ts of Antarctica.

While this plastic problem has become more prevalent, one of the most pristine ecosystems on Earth, the fjords of the Western Antarctic Peninsula, have been revealed by retreating glaciers.

Tucked between islands and the mainland, the coast along the Western Antarctic Peninsula has long, narrow inlets created by glaciers. During the last 50 years, these fjords have physically changed, due to reduced sea ice cover and because nearly 90% of glaciers have retreated in this region. These processes have exposed the ocean floor of many of the fjords for the first time.

The potential for microplast­ics to impact this environmen­t and its marine life is huge – and we’re now working to figure out the depth of the effect that microplast­ic pollution is having on the newly colonised habitats. Any microplast­ics recovered in the Southern Ocean, particular­ly in newly formed ecosystems, raise alarm. They not only indicate that the area has been affected, but that plastic pollution is increasing­ly ubiquitous too.

In November 2017, our multidisci­plinary UK-Chile-US-Canada research team – known as ICEBERGS – joined the RRS James Clark Ross (an ice-strengthen­ed research ship) and headed to Antarctica’s northernmo­st fjords.

Our goal was, and still is, to gain a better understand­ing of how the environmen­t and organisms evolve in newly emerging and colonising habitats in Antarctica. We are particular­ly interested in the marine ecosystems on the ocean floor, so have been looking at areas such as Marian Cove and Börgen Bay on the Western Antarctic Peninsula, where communitie­s have only developed in the last few decades – due to the retreating glaciers.

Thriving marine ecosystems can act as climate regulators. When ice retreats, new, pristine fjordic habitats are revealed and phytoplank­ton blooms occur. These help to counteract climate change because they take carbon dioxide gas out of the atmosphere.

New productive seabed habitat also becomes available for the diverse shallow-water fauna that eat this algae, and store the carbon longterm. Not counteract­ing climate change, however, is the fact that new open water absorbs heat faster, in contrast to ice that would have reflected it.

The animals colonising the exposed fjords face challengin­g conditions.

The sediment and fresh water flowing in the glacier melt runoff make it very difficult for many organisms to survive. And, if exposed to them, microplast­ics can be a serious concern for many marine animals, especially filter-feeding organisms (for example krill, and other zooplankto­n).

As these creatures filter water to obtain food, they may ingest microplast­ics which can clog and block their feeding appendages, limiting food intake. Ingested microplast­ics may be transferre­d to the circulator­y system too, which can cause an increased immune response.

Microplast­ics may also bring in new bacteria and chemical pollutants attached to them too. So, because many filter-feeding organisms support the entire food web, any impact on them should be expected to have cascading effects on the ecosystem.

In newly revealed habitats, creatures are less likely to have been impacted by marine pollutants previously, so they can help us learn about more recent changes in an environmen­t.

To our knowledge, microplast­ics have not been found in the Antarctic fjords before now, but our preliminar­y results have already found an alarmingly high presence – similar to those found in the open water of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, near big civilisati­ons.

These results came from samples taken directly from the fjords, and we are now looking further at the evidence of how micro-organisms are being affected by microplast­ics. During the next two Antarctic summers, we will be collecting more geophysica­l, physical oceanograp­hic, sedimentol­ogical and biological data from these pristine sites in the same locations, so we can compare the changes over time in the habitats that colonise new ocean floor in Antarctic fjords.

Only after such rigorous data collection and analysis will we be able to tell the true impact of microplast­ics on pristine environmen­ts. Until then, we can all do our bit to cut down on potential pollution and protect what may very well be the last pristine environmen­ts on Earth.

■ Dr Alexis Janosik is Assistant Professor of Biology at the University of West Florida, Dr David Barnes is a Data Interpreta­tion Ecologist for British Antarctic Survey, Professor James Scourse is Professor of Physical Geography at University of Exeter and Dr Katrien Van Landeghem is Senior Lecturer in Marine Geology at Bangor University.

■ This article first appeared on www.theconvers­ation.com

 ?? Yui Mok ?? > An exfoliatin­g daily wash containing micro-beads, which have now been banned in the UK
Yui Mok > An exfoliatin­g daily wash containing micro-beads, which have now been banned in the UK

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