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The links between marine plastic litter and the air-sea flux of greenhouse gases

Frontiers in Marine Science 2023 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Lonneke Goddijn‐Murphy, David Woolf, Ryan Pereira, Christa Marandino, Adrian H. Callaghan, Jacek Piskozub

Summary

A review of the intersecting crises of climate change and plastic pollution explores how marine plastic litter can both increase and decrease air-sea greenhouse gas fluxes through multiple poorly understood mechanisms, including surface film effects, microbial activity on plastics, and photochemical reactions. Untangling these interactions matters for building accurate climate models and understanding whether plastic pollution has a net warming or cooling effect on ocean-atmosphere gas exchange.

Climate change and plastic pollution are two of the most pressing environmental challenges caused by human activity, and they are directly and indirectly linked. We focus on the relationship between marine plastic litter and the air-sea flux of greenhouse gases (GHGs). Marine plastic litter has the potential to both enhance and reduce oceanic GHG fluxes, but this depends on many factors that are not well understood. Different kinds of plastic behave quite differently in the sea, affecting air-sea gas exchange in different, largely unknown, ways. The mechanisms of air-sea exchange of GHGs have been extensively studied and if air-sea gas transfer coefficients and concentrations of the gas in water and air are known, calculating the resulting GHG fluxes is reasonably straightforward. However, relatively little is known about the consequences of marine plastic litter for gas transfer coefficients, concentrations, and fluxes. Here we evaluate the most important aspects controlling the exchange of GHGs between the sea and the atmosphere and how marine plastic litter could change these. The aim is to move towards improving air-sea GHG flux calculations in the presence of plastic litter and we have largely limited ourselves to identifying processes, rather than estimating relative importance.

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