We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Microplastic Pollution Projects and Participatory Science
Summary
This paper discusses citizen science and participatory science projects for monitoring microplastic pollution, reviewing methodological approaches, data quality considerations, and the potential for large-scale pollution mapping through public engagement.
Plastics include different types of polymers, often mixed with additives which give them the desired properties (flexibility, rigidity, color, fire resistance, etc.). The diversity of properties and possible uses of plastics, combined with their strength and lightness, have made them a preferred material in many sectors (packaging, medical, construction, etc.). Their use has grown exponentially since the 1950s, today reaching 400 million tons per year.Plastics are therefore present everywhere, whether in aquatic environments or in terrestrial environments. Today, the omnipresence of plastic waste at sea and on the coast has become a subject of major public, scientific and public health concern."Microplastic" refers to tiny plastic particles that measure less than 5 millimeters and that can be found in landfills, rivers, soils and mostly in oceans. These microplastics come from various sources such as the breakdown of larger plastic items (bags, tyres, bottles), microbeads in personal care products, and synthetic fibers from textiles. This widespread contamination rises a serious threat to marine life, ecosystems and human healthcare. Although microplastic pollution is major environmental concern, this topic is not yet included in school programs. In order to involve students to this crucial pollution problem, we are experimenting a science club with all volunteer students since September 2023.The club is part of two national participatory science projects which consist in collecting data, conducting experiments, and analyzing results and communicate with researchers. The first project has been initiated by the Tara Ocean foundation. This project is an educational operation serving education in science and sustainable development which offers students the opportunity to contribute to the inventory of plastic pollution on beaches and banks in France.The database created feeds scientific research and contributes to political decision support at different levels. We had to choose a sampling site on the banks of the Seine which has to be approved by scientists. The, we will collect plastic samples and, back at school, we will sort plastic according to their size. The data collected are used to complete a database which is freely accessible by any researcher.The second participatory project in which the club is involved is the “Plastizen” project, lead by the CNRS . It aims to study the fate of biodegradable plastic bags in the soil by taking into account different ecological factors (temperature, humidity, pH). Some samples of conventional plastic and biodegradable plastic are buried in the soil. pH of the soil is measured. Then, each month, the samples have to be removed, measured, pictured and the results are sent to CNRS.These two projects allow discussing the scientific contents and methodologic approach of science with the students. But we also plan to organize local cleanup events, and awareness campaigns (creation of informational posters, comic strips, …).The poster will describe the challenges of this work, the way it has been driven and the first results. The exchanges with the students and their perception of these participatory projects will be summarized and discussed.
Sign in to start a discussion.
More Papers Like This
Citizen Science for Monitoring Plastic Pollution from Source to Sea: A Systematic Review of Methodologies, Best Practices, and Challenges
This systematic review examines how citizen science programs track plastic pollution from land to sea. The research found that while public participation greatly expands data collection, inconsistent methods and data quality issues limit the scientific usefulness of the results. Better-designed citizen science programs could help communities monitor and respond to the microplastic pollution in their local environments.
Making citizen science count: Best practices and challenges of citizen science projects on plastics in aquatic environments
This paper reviews best practices and challenges for citizen science projects focused on plastic pollution in aquatic environments, finding that while citizen science can effectively gather large-scale data and raise public awareness, data quality and consistency remain significant challenges.
Volunteer microplastic sampling in Puget Sound: strategies for broad inclusion, education, and research
This paper describes a volunteer microplastic sampling program in Puget Sound, Washington, examining strategies for community participation and data quality in citizen science monitoring of marine plastic pollution. The program demonstrates how broad public involvement can generate spatially extensive environmental data at low cost.
The sampling and analysis of coastal microplastic and mesoplastic: Development of a citizen science approach
This study designed, developed, and tested a citizen science approach to microplastic and mesoplastic data collection on coastal beaches to address scale and coverage limitations of traditional research methods. Results showed non-expert participants could collect comparable data to researchers, expanding monitoring capacity across undersampled coastlines.
Citizen science in environmental and ecological sciences
This review describes how citizen science, where non-professional volunteers help collect data, is being applied in environmental and ecological research. Citizen science projects have contributed to monitoring pollution, biodiversity, and water quality across large geographic areas. The approach is relevant to microplastic research because trained volunteers can help sample and catalog microplastic contamination across many locations that professional scientists cannot cover alone.