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November 19, 2024

7-year study reveals plastic fragments from all over the globe are rising rapidly in the North Pacific Garbage Patch

North Pacific Garbage Patch is growing quicker than predicted. Credit: IOP Publishing
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North Pacific Garbage Patch is growing quicker than predicted. Credit: IOP Publishing

A study in Environmental Research Letters reveals that centimeter-sized plastic fragments are increasing much faster than larger floating plastics in the North Pacific Garbage Patch [NPGP], threatening the local ecosystem and potentially the global carbon cycle.

The research, which draws from not-for-profit The Ocean Cleanup's systematic surveys of the NPGP between 2015 and 2022, found an unexpected rise in mass concentration of plastic fragments that are likely new to the region, and not resulting from degradation of already present objects.

The researchers hypothesize that these fragments from the break-down of decades-old plastics discarded globally are now accumulating and exponentially increasing in this remote region of the Pacific Ocean.

The study examined 917 manta trawl samples, 162 mega trawl samples, 74 aerial surveys, and 40 cleanup system extractions from 50 individual expeditions between 2015 and 2022.

Key findings include:

The volume of plastic debris in the region surpasses that of living organisms, threatening the ecosystem not only by the ingestion or entanglement of plastic by , but also potentially impacting the because of zooplankton grazing affected by the presence of floating microplastics.

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Due to the increase in floating plastics, endemic marine animals are now in direct competition with new species that have colonized plastic debris and drifted to this remote part of the ocean.

Laurent Lebreton, lead author of the paper says, "The exponential rise in plastic fragments observed in our field studies is a direct consequence of decades of inadequate plastic waste management, leading to the relentless accumulation of plastics in the marine environment.

"This pollution is inflicting harm on marine life, with impacts we are only now beginning to fully grasp. Our findings should serve as an urgent call to action for lawmakers engaged in negotiating a global treaty to end plastic pollution. Now, more than ever, decisive and unified global intervention is essential."

The researchers emphasize that, while countries are prioritizing upstream plastic pollution prevention, the interception and removal of already present plastics from the global marine environment is essential to urgently mitigate the generation of increasingly smaller fragments in the ocean for decades to come.

More information: Seven years into the North Pacific Garbage Patch: legacy plastic fragments rising disproportionally faster than larger floating objects, Environmental Research Letters (2024).

Journal information: Environmental Research Letters

Provided by IOP Publishing

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