0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Food & Water Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Occurrence, sources, fate and transport of textile fibers in oceanic environments

2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Giuseppe Suaria

Summary

This review covers the occurrence, sources, transport pathways, and environmental fate of synthetic and natural textile fibers in oceanic environments. Despite global fiber production exceeding 107 million tonnes annually, the authors find that natural fibers (cotton, wool) are actually more abundant than synthetic fibers in most environmental samples.

Study Type Environmental

Global production of synthetic and natural textile fibres has more than doubled in the last 20 years, reaching 107 million tonnes in 2018 and is expected to reach 145 million tonnes in 2030 if business continues as usual. Synthetic fibers now account for nearly two-thirds of global fiber production and 14.5% of plastic production, although it is now clear that most of the fibers found in the environment are natural fibers of animal or plant origin, such as cotton and wool. The increasing consumption of textile products has led to the accumulation of large quantities of microfibers in the marine environment, with impacts and degradation times currently unknown. Textile fibers are now the most prevalent type of anthropogenic particle detected in microplastic pollution surveys worldwide, often accounting for 80-90% of microplastic counts. Substantial concentrations of microfibers have been detected globally in surface and subsurface waters, polar regions, deep-sea and coastal sediments, as well as terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems. Recent studies have reported the presence of these particles in atmospheric samples even in the most remote areas of the planet. Given their abundance, it is not surprising that fibers have also been found in food, drinking water, and human lungs, as well as in the digestive system of many aquatic and terrestrial organisms. The potential impacts of microfiber ingestion on marine organisms are still under investigation, but concerns exist regarding physical damage, reduced feeding, and the transfer of adsorbed pollutants. Furthermore, a wide variety of chemicals, including dyes, additives, and flame retardants, are used during natural and synthetic textile production, raising concerns about the role of fibers as carriers of hazardous substances in the environment. Future research should focus on understanding the degradation rates of different fiber types, the effects of microfibers on marine ecosystems, and the development of strategies to reduce microfiber pollution. This talk will review and summarize available information on the occurrence, sources, fate, accumulation, and transport of natural and synthetic fibers in the marine environment. Results and research experiences dealing with the distribution, movements, long-range transport, degradation, and sinking dynamics of fibers in ocean environments will be presented. The main methods used to quantify this contaminant in the marine environment and the critical knowledge gaps that require further research will also be discussed. By understanding the extent of microfiber pollution and its potential impacts on marine ecosystems, we can work towards sustainable textile production and consumption practices.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

The fiber microparticle pipeline in the marine water column – from source to mitigation strategies

This review examines the sources, environmental transport, and health implications of microfibers — including synthetic fibers from textiles and natural fibers — in the marine water column. With global fiber production exceeding 100 million metric tons annually, synthetic microfibers are one of the most abundant forms of microplastic in the ocean.

Article Tier 2

Microfibers in oceanic surface waters: A global characterization

A global analysis of 916 seawater samples from six ocean basins characterized microfibers as ubiquitous contaminants, finding that many are not synthetic textiles but natural or semi-synthetic materials, questioning the assumption that all environmental fibers are microplastic.

Article Tier 2

Marine environment microfiber contamination: Global patterns and the diversity of microparticle origins

Researchers collected 1,393 one-liter water grab samples globally and found a mean microparticle concentration of 11.8 particles per liter — roughly 1,000 times higher than model predictions — with 91% being microfibers, 57% synthetic, and highest densities in polar oceans, while also documenting underreported non-synthetic and semi-synthetic fibers from natural textile sources.

Article Tier 2

Synthetic fibers as microplastics in the marine environment: A review from textile perspective with a focus on domestic washings

This review examined synthetic fibers as a source of microplastics in the marine environment, tracing the full textile lifecycle from manufacturing through use and disposal to understand where and how fibers enter aquatic systems.

Article Tier 2

Research progress on occurrence characteristics and source analysis of microfibers in the marine environment

This review systematically examined the sources of synthetic microfiber pollution in marine environments, covering laundry, fishing gear, industrial textile discharge, and other origins. The authors note that the key sources of marine microfibers remain contested and call for improved source attribution methods.

Share this paper