Los Angeles Times

Plastic particles are discovered in the Arctic

Scientists are troubled by microplast­ic levels in one of the Earth’s most remote regions.

- AMINA KHAN

Scientists are troubled by the high microplast­ic levels in one of Earth’s most remote and pristine regions.

Scientists who sampled seemingly pristine Arctic snow have discovered high levels of microplast­ics that were likely carried north by the atmosphere.

The discovery, published this week in the journal Science Advances, points to an unexpected­ly high source of microplast­ics in one of the most remote and pristine regions of Earth. It also raises troubling questions about the environmen­tal and health implicatio­ns of potential exposure to such airborne plastics.

“I was really astonished concerning the high concentrat­ions,” said senior author Gunnar Gerdts, a marine microbiolo­gist at the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany.

Some 380 million metric tons of plastic are produced each year. Much of it ends up in the trash — in fact, experts predict that by 2050, the world will be throwing away 3.4 billion metric tons of the stuff each year, the study authors wrote.

The problem is that plastic is highly durable, which means it doesn’t easily degrade once it’s tossed into a landfill. But it can be broken up into smaller and smaller pieces until it becomes microplast­ic, fragments that are smaller than 5 millimeter­s.

Many countries let waste leak into the environmen­t, and that plastic and microplast­ic can last for a long time — and travel a long way.

Discarded plastics have washed up on the shores of remote islands. They’ve collected in the open ocean, forming polluted regions such as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. And according to previous work by Gerdts and his colleagues, they’ve even ended up in the Arctic, a region that should be largely untouched by human activity.

“We found a lot of microplast­ics, like record concentrat­ions, and the question arose: From where does the microplast­ic originate?” Gerdts said. There were only two likely suspects: “It’s from the water or from the air.”

A large amount of plastic gets moved around on ocean currents, but researcher­s have begun to show that it can be circulated in the air as well. Scientists have found microplast­ics in the atmospheri­c fallout of cities like Tehran and Dongguan, China. A study in France found that the concentrat­ion of microplast­ic deposited from the atmosphere spiked fivefold after it rained, suggesting that precipitat­ion may play some role in its movements.

To find out how much microplast­ic was in the air, Gerdts and his colleagues analyzed snow collected from ice floes drifting in Fram Strait east of Greenland and from the nearby Norwegian archipelag­o of Svalbard. They also gathered samples around cities in Europe and from the Alps so they could compare the environmen­ts.

The samples took many routes to get to the research lab. Scientists flew by helicopter or sailed by dinghy to ice floes in the Fram Strait to scoop snow with a clean mug and a steel spoon or soup ladle. Citizen scientists on snowmobile­s gathered samples in Svalbard. Team members in Bremen, Germany, used glass jars to carefully collect fresh powder from white-coated cars.

The scientists were careful to sample only snow on the surface because they wanted to see how much microplast­ic was brought there by fresh precipitat­ion. Snow can pick up tiny particles and pollutants and transport them over great distances, and the researcher­s wanted to know if they were doing the same for microplast­ics, too.

The scientists then used a type of infrared spectrosco­py to determine the compositio­n of their samples.

The team found up to 14,400 microplast­ic particles per liter of melted Arctic snow. That was not as high as the European samples, which contained up to 154,000 particles per liter, but it was still unexpected­ly high for a region that is supposed to be all but beyond the influence of humans, the researcher­s said.

Among the particles the researcher­s detected were varnish, different types of rubber, polyethyle­ne (the kind of plastic in grocery bags) and polyamide (a component of materials like nylon and Kevlar). Some samples had only two types of polymer; others had a dozen.

There were also compositio­nal difference­s in different locations. The Arctic samples held mostly nitrile rubber, acrylics and paint. Snow from near a rural road in Bavaria had several types of rubber, some of which are often found in car tires, among other things.

The particles were very small, ranging in size from 475 microns (less than half a millimeter) to 11 microns. A full 80% of those particles measured 25 microns or less. As the particles got smaller, they generally became more numerous, suggesting that there may be many more particles even smaller than the scientists’ 11-micron detection limit.

Plastic and microplast­ics have been thought of as marine and aquatic pollutants, ending up in waterways, oceans and the animals that live within them. But the airborne particles found in this study add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that microplast­ics could be contributi­ng to air pollution — and thus could be affecting the health of terrestria­l life, including humans.

Of course, the microplast­ics that end up in the Arctic don’t simply disappear, said Chelsea Rochman, an ecologist at the University of Toronto who was not involved in the study.

“The Arctic is an incredibly fragile ecosystem that is under a lot of stress,” she said. “With climate change, where you have ice melting, you might have more plastics being bio-available than you did when it’s locked up in the ice.”

This means the plastic could be finding its way into food chains that include Inuit communitie­s, Rochman said. Some people she works with are concerned their food sources have been contaminat­ed.

Beyond examining conditions in the Arctic, the new findings offer a more global perspectiv­e on what might be called a “plastic cycle,” she added.

“Microplast­ics are everywhere and ubiquitous, and they’re cycling in the water cycle, and we should think about this more broadly,” she said.

More research is needed to evaluate the full environmen­tal and health impacts of airborne microplast­ics, the study said.

“I think we have to have a holistic view on the microplast­ics problem,” Gerdts said. “It’s a global problem — and if we want to understand the sources and the sink, we really have to team up with other discipline­s, other scientists, to get a full picture and finally to judge whether it’s really dangerous or not.”

‘With climate change, where you have ice melting, you might have more plastics being bio-available than you did when it’s locked up in the ice.’ — Chelsea Rochman, University of Toronto ecologist

 ?? Kajetan Deja Mine Tekman ?? SCIENTISTS COLLECT snow samples in the Arctic, where microplast­ics have been found. Experts suspect the high levels of the particles arrived by water or air.
Kajetan Deja Mine Tekman SCIENTISTS COLLECT snow samples in the Arctic, where microplast­ics have been found. Experts suspect the high levels of the particles arrived by water or air.

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