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Microplastic pollution in the surface waters of Vava'u, Tonga
Summary
Researchers found high concentrations of microplastics — over 329,000 pieces per square kilometer — in the surface waters of Tonga's Vava'u archipelago, with a significant proportion of particles smaller than 300 micrometers that would be missed by standard sampling nets.
Marine plastic pollution, particularly microplastics, has been recognised as a global issue in the recent years, but research efforts in the Pacific are lagging. We carried out research on microplastics contamination of surface waters of the Vava'u archipelago, Tonga. Since microplastics smaller than the standard mesh size (333-335 μm) are readily reported in the literature on microplastics, we used a finer plankton net (100 μm) to determine the proportion of captured microplastics smaller than 300 μm. Isolated microplastics were counted and measured using stereomicroscope with polymer identification performed by FTIR spectroscopy. The analysis revealed high microplastics concentrations (329,299.7 ± 40,994.2 pcs km<sup>-2</sup> or 1.05 ± 0.13 pcs m<sup>-3</sup>). The proportion of particles smaller than 300 μm was 40 %. The predominant type of microplastics in surface waters were small bits of white film, which we associated with cement-filled white bags used to construct docks throughout Vava'u, often heavily eroded.
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