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Microplastics in Lake sediments in Robert Island, Antarctica

Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 2024 Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Yasemen Şentürk, Ülgen Aytan, Yasemen Şentürk, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Yasemen Şentürk, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Yasemen Şentürk, Ülgen Aytan, Korhan Özkan Korhan Özkan Yasemen Şentürk, Yasemen Şentürk, Yasemen Şentürk, Yasemen Şentürk, Yasemen Şentürk, Yasemen Şentürk, Yasemen Şentürk, Yasemen Şentürk, Raif Kandemir, Ülgen Aytan, Raif Kandemir, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Ülgen Aytan, Korhan Özkan

Summary

Microplastic pollution was investigated in lake sediments on Robert Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica, finding MPs in both a glacial lake and three coastal lakes sampled during the 2018 Turkish Antarctic Science Expedition. The study documented that even isolated Antarctic freshwater systems are contaminated with microplastics, with fibres and fragments most common.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastic (MP) pollution was investigated in the sediment of lakes on Robert Island in the South Shetland Islands located in the northwest of the Antarctic Peninsula. Sediment samples were taken from a glacial lake (L1) and three coastal lakes (L2, L3 and L4) in March and April 2018 as part of the Turkish Antarctic Science Expedition-II (TAE-II). MPs were counted, and physically (shape, colour, size) and chemically characterized by stereomicroscope and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR). Fiber and fragments were found in the coastal lakes, while only fibers were found in the glacial lake sediment. The meanMP concentration was 28.3 mp. l-1±37.9 mp. l-1 sediment in the glacial lake and 49.6 mp. l-1±97.1 mp. l-1 sediment in coastal lakes. A total of six different colours of MPs were found with transparent and blue were dominant. The size of MPs varied between 0.08-2.12 mm (mean 0.96±0.55 mm). FT-IR analysis confirmed that MPs were composed of Ethylene Vinyl Acetate (EVA), Polyethylene terephthalate (PET), Polypropylene (PP), Polymethyl Methacrylate (PMMA), Polyethylene (PE), Polyurethane (PU), and Polyacrylonitrile (PAN). Presence of MPs in the lake`s sediment highlights the vulnerability of Antarctica's environment to this unbounded and unpredictable pervasive pollutant and raises concerns about the potential effects of MPs on its unique ecosystems, which are critical to global climate regulation. More comprehensive research on distribution, characteristics, sources and transport of MPs in this remote region is recommended to fully understand the level of risk that MPs represents to ecosystem health.

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