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Coupling fragmentation to a size-selective sedimentation model can quantify the long-term fate of buoyant plastics in the ocean

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 43 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Nan Wu Nan Wu Kate Spencer, Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Stuart Grieve, Nan Wu Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Stuart Grieve, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Nan Wu Nan Wu Stuart Grieve, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Stuart Grieve, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Andrew J. Manning, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Andrew J. Manning, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Andrew J. Manning, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Kate Spencer, Nan Wu Andrew J. Manning, Nan Wu Kate Spencer, Stuart Grieve, Kate Spencer, Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu Nan Wu

Summary

A size-selective sedimentation model was coupled with fragmentation dynamics to simulate how large plastic items break down and settle in aquatic environments over time. The coupled model advances predictions of microplastic size distributions and spatial accumulation patterns in rivers and oceans.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Plastic pollution in the ocean is a global environmental issue, with buoyant debris accumulating at the surface and posing long-term ecological threats. Although sediments are the ultimate sink for plastics, a mismatch between observed surface concentrations and estimated inputs implies the understanding of vertical sedimentation mechanisms and rates are inaccurate. Here, we present a coupled fragmentation-sedimentation model that quantitatively predicts the vertical transport and long-term fate of buoyant plastic debris and microplastics (MPs, less than 5 mm). Using a representative 10 mm polyethylene (PE) particle, we show that fragmentation into small MPs is essential for their incorporation into marine snow aggregates (MSAs) and subsequent settling. Even after 100 yr, ca. 10% of the initial plastic mass still remains at the surface providing a continual source of small MPs to ocean surface waters. This study provides the first mechanistic framework linking large plastic degradation to size selective sedimentation, demonstrating that plastic pollution will persist at our ocean surfaces for over a century even if inputs cease. Our findings highlight the need for mitigation strategies beyond input reduction and ocean clean-up, addressing the long-term removal of existing ocean plastics.This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue 'Sedimentology of plastics: state of the art and future directions'.

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