Dayton Daily News

Cigarette butts are seas’ big microplast­ic hazard

- By Tamara Dietrich Daily Press (Newport News, Va.)

— You’ve NEWPORTNEW­S,VA. seen it: A driver idling at a stoplight flicks a cigarette butt out the window or a worker during a smoking break drops one to the sidewalk.

What you don’t see is what happens to those cigarette butts. Typically, rain sweeps them down storm drains, into local waterways and, eventually, into the Chesapeake Bay or the Atlantic. There, those tough little cigarette filters — made of tightly packed plastic fibers — start to erode into smaller and smaller plastic bits, joining a cascade of microplast­ic pollution that’s bedeviling the world’s oceans and the living things they support.

Microplast­ics may be small, but their impact is far from it.

“Viruses aren’t big, either,” said Robert Hale, who studies microplast­ic pollution at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science in Gloucester Point. “So the idea of something small being not a problem is actually completely 180 degrees from reality.”

Plastic bags, balloons and water bottles pose one threat when they’re ingested by sea turtles, fish and waterbirds that mistake them for food.

But microplast­ics — or, more accurately, micro shards — get gobbled up by the tiniest creatures that form the base of the marine food web. Some pieces are so tiny that they can pass through cell membranes.

Those micro shards climb the food chain, compoundin­g the damage and the dangers along the way.

For more than 20 years, cigarette butts have been the No. 1 debris item reported in Virginia during coastal cleanups, according to Katie Register, executive director of Clean Virginia Waterways of Longwood University.

Register wrote the 2016 Virginia Marine Debris Reduction Plan for the Coastal Zone Management Program at the Department of Environmen­tal Quality.

That finding bears out whenever VIMS faculty and volunteers conduct a beach cleanup. In less than a mile of shoreline, volunteers can pick up more than 3,000 cigarette butts — far outpacing the number of plastic food wrappers from a recent cleanup (981), fast food containers (15), foam packaging (60) and bottles (6).

“I would imagine many people are working under the assumption that cigarette butts are biodegrada­ble,” said Meredith Evans Seeley, a doctoral student studying plastics in Hale’s lab.

“I think many people believe that they break down into the environmen­t and break down fully, so that they’re not causing any harm.”

Plastics can last seemingly forever, and they’re everywhere.

Scientists said they’ve found plastic particles raining from the sky in such pristine areas as the Pyrenees Mountains in southern France, and in the depths of the oceans, where tiny bottom-dwelling creatures eat them.

“We can now say with confidence that plastic is everywhere,” Alan Jamieson, marine biologist at Newcastle University in England and lead author of the deep ocean microplast­ics study, told National Geographic.

Hale and Seeley, for instance, and their colleague Patty Zwollo, biology professor at the College of William and Mary, have studied microplast­ics — and the chemical additives leaching out of them — that wash up even in remote parts of Alaska.

To curb the flow of plastics into the oceans, Seeley uses the analogy of the overflowin­g bathtub: You don’t tackle the problem first by cleaning up the mess on the floor — you turn off the faucet.

Even cutting down on items like plastic straws or cutlery can have a big impact over time, she said. Smokers can buy pocket ashtrays or insulated bags to dispose of their cigarette butts.

 ?? DANIEL LINHART/NEWPORT NEWS DAILY PRESS ?? Meredith Evans Seeley and Robert Hale search for different sources of microfiber­s such as plastic bottles, styrofoam and cigarette butts at Gloucester Point Beach.
DANIEL LINHART/NEWPORT NEWS DAILY PRESS Meredith Evans Seeley and Robert Hale search for different sources of microfiber­s such as plastic bottles, styrofoam and cigarette butts at Gloucester Point Beach.

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