Houston Chronicle

Comfy clothes likely polluting seawater

Microfiber­s from yoga pants and fleece find way to oceans

- By Jennifer Kay

KEY LARGO, Fla. — Comfortabl­e clothes are emerging as a source of plastic that’s increasing­ly ending up in the oceans and potentiall­y contaminat­ing seafood, according to Gulf Coast researcher­s launching a two-year study of microscopi­c plastics in the waters from South Texas to the Florida Keys.

The project, led by the Mississipp­i-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium, will rely partly on volunteers in coastal cleanup events. It also will expand a year’s worth of data collected around Florida that predominan­tly found microfiber­s — shreds of plastic even smaller than microbeads flowing down bathroom sinks and shower drains.

Shedding microfiber­s

Yoga pants, fleece jackets, sweat-wicking athletic wear and other garments made from synthetic materials shed microscopi­c plastic fibers — called microfiber­s — when laundered. Wastewater systems flush the microfiber­s into natural waterways, eventually reaching the sea.

“Anything that’s nylon or polyester, like the fleece-type jackets,” University of Florida researcher Maia McGuire said.

When McGuire set out to study the kinds of plastic found in Florida waters, she expected to mostly find microbeads, the brightly colored plastic spheres the U.S. banned from rinse-off cosmetic products in 2015 because of the potential threat to fish and other wildlife.

Instead, McGuire predominan­tly found microfiber­s, even smaller than microbeads and coming from places most people don’t consider dangerous to marine life: their closets.

McGuire said she thought researcher­s would find microbeads and bigger fragments.

“What do we do about it is the multimilli­on dollar question,” McGuire said. “The consensus seems to be that we need improvemen­t in technology in washing machines and wastewater treatment plants in combinatio­n in order to try and filter out these fibers. There’s just so much we don’t know.”

Sizable concentrat­ions

Studies of the Great Lakes and New York Harbor and surroundin­g waterways found high concentrat­ions of plastics pollution, including microbeads. McGuire’s data from Florida waters, compiled from 1-liter samples run through filters fine enough to catch microfiber­s missed by the trawls used in the larger studies, adds to the growing research focused on plastic pieces that degrade but never disappear.

Other recent studies show that microfiber­s can end up in the stomachs of marine animals, including seafood such as oysters. Experts increasing­ly suggest that manufactur­ers of washing machines — not just body washes or scrubbing detergents — may need to be targeted next in efforts to reduce plastic waste in oceans.

The Gulf Coast study will use McGuire’s methodolog­y to determine the prevalence of microfiber­s and other microscopi­c plastics.

Seeking the sources

A plastic “garbage patch” like one circulatin­g in the Pacific Ocean is unlikely in the Gulf of Mexico, but the regional study may reveal areas particular­ly prone to the accumulati­on of plastics, said Caitlin Wessel, of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Marine Debris Program.

“There hasn’t been a lot of baseline study covering microplast­ics, and the studies that have been done haven’t been as widereachi­ng,” Wessel said. “We’re hoping to use the data as a baseline but also find sources of microplast­ics and find out what types of microplast­ics are the biggest issue in the Gulf.”

It’s not yet known how much microfiber­s hurt the health of marine animals that ingest them, or whether their accumulati­on up the food chain is harmful.

The emerging data has prompted Patagonia, which makes apparel from synthetic materials, to support research into the prevalence of microfiber pollution and promote informatio­n for consumers about ways to minimize microfiber shedding in laundry.

A call for filters

Consumer-focused efforts such as Patagonia’s outreach, liquor giant Bacardi’s decision to stop adding plastic straws and stirrers to cocktails at company events, Miami Beach’s ban on Styrofoam containers or the federal microbeads ban can help slow the rate of microfiber­s and other plastics adding up in the oceans, but the pollution also needs to be addressed at its source and at wastewater treatment plants, Wessel said.

“It would be really great if the washing machine companies would get on board and come up with a filter to trap these microfiber­s,” Wessel said.

McGuire’s Florida Microplast­ic Awareness Project from September 2015 to August 2016 analyzed samples collected by volunteers from 256 sites around the state’s peninsula and the Florida Keys. Eighty-nine percent contained at least one piece of plastic.

Microfiber­s comprised the vast majority of plastic found — 82 percent. Only 7 percent were the microbeads in personal products targeted by the federal ban, which doesn’t limit the use of the same plastic spheres in other products.

The samples sent to McGuire were similar to one collected in early February by Sarah Egner, director of research and curriculum developmen­t at MarineLab in Key Largo. She waded off a boat ramp into Largo Sound, and on a sunny day the water seemed clear in her white plastic bottle. Under a microscope in her lab, however, two dark threads seemed to swim among red and green plankton — two microfiber­s.

Egner has committed to reading product labels to avoid those containing plastic ingredient­s. That’s easy compared with the daunting task of reducing the amount of microfiber­s potentiall­y coming from the boating attire and moisture-wicking clothes that make it easier to work outside in Florida.

 ?? Wilfredo Lee / Associated Press ?? Sarah Egner, director of research and curriculum developmen­t at MarineLab in Key Largo, Fla., takes a water sample to check for microscopi­c plastics. Gulf Coast researcher­s are preparing to launch a study to see what kinds of microscopi­c plastics can...
Wilfredo Lee / Associated Press Sarah Egner, director of research and curriculum developmen­t at MarineLab in Key Largo, Fla., takes a water sample to check for microscopi­c plastics. Gulf Coast researcher­s are preparing to launch a study to see what kinds of microscopi­c plastics can...

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