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Microfiber Hotspots’ Association with Ships in a Remote Port before and during Covid-19

ACS ES&T Water 2023 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Guyu Peng, Caroline Mengeot, Chunhua Jiang, Baile Xu, Xin Zhong, You Song, Feng Zhang, Daoji Li

Summary

Researchers monitored microfiber and microplastic abundance in surface waters off a remote Norwegian port (Brønnøysund) before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, finding unexpectedly high microfiber concentrations associated with ship activity in this low-urbanization coastal location.

Study Type Environmental

During monthly water quality monitoring of Norwegian coastal waters, the sea surface waters off Brønnøysund, a remote port in Norway, exhibited an unexpectedly high abundance of microfibers. We further conducted monitoring of microplastics and microfibers from the surface waters off the city before and during the Covid-19 pandemic. Analysis of the microfiber characteristics, which were primarily comprised of cellulosic and polyester fibers, revealed similarities with those found in the global ocean, but at concentrations that were 1-4 orders of magnitude higher, with the maximum concentration reaching 491 n/L (0.34 mg/L). Source apportionment of microfibers using multivariate analyses based on simultaneous water chemistry data showed positive correlations with ships. Contrary to previous assumptions that marine microfibers were derived from land-based sources, our findings revealed that gray water discharge from ships significantly contributed to microfibers in the oceans. The demonstrated causations using path modeling between microfibers, gray water, shipping, and noncargo shipping activities call for urgent research and regulatory actions toward addressing plastic pollution in the UN Decade of Ocean Science.

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