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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 Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Marine snow as vectors for microplastic transport: Multiple aggregation cycles account for the settling of buoyant microplastics to deep‐sea sediments

Limnology and Oceanography 2025 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Nan Wu Nan Wu Kate Spencer, Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Stuart Grieve, Nan Wu Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Nan Wu Nan Wu Stuart Grieve, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Stuart Grieve, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Andrew J. Manning, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Andrew J. Manning, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Nan Wu Andrew J. Manning, Nan Wu Kate Spencer, Stuart Grieve, Kate Spencer, Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu

Summary

Researchers developed a model explaining how buoyant microplastics end up in deep-sea sediments through repeated cycles of incorporation into marine snow aggregates. They showed that multiple aggregation-sinking-disaggregation cycles can progressively transport low-density microplastics from the ocean surface to the seafloor. The study provides the first comprehensive theoretical framework for understanding the full journey of buoyant microplastics from surface waters to deep-sea deposits.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract Many studies have reported the paradoxical observation of high concentrations of low‐density microplastics (plastic particles < 5 mm) in deep‐sea sediments despite their buoyancy. The incorporation of buoyant microplastics into marine snow has been observed to enhance microplastic settling. Previous studies on the vertical movement of buoyant microplastics have been unable to theoretically account for these ocean observations and no study has comprehensively elucidated microplastic transport pathways in the ocean from the surface to seafloor. Here, we establish a one‐dimensional theoretical model, that embraces key elements of the flocculation process, to explain how marine snow acts as a vector to transport buoyant microplastics to deep water and the ocean bottom. Microplastics reach the ocean floor through multiple cycles of aggregation, settling, and disaggregation between marine snow and microplastics. Each settling cycle results in a net settling of 200–400 m. We demonstrate that microplastics with different sizes show distinct vertical settling behaviors and only microplastics less than 100 μ m in diameter can reach the ocean bottom. This theoretical model refines our ability to predict and understand the global and long‐term fate, transport, and inventory of microplastics in the ocean interior, the influence of microplastics on the biological carbon pump and the efficacy of plastic management policies.

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