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Half-life of biodegradable plastics in the marine environment depends on material, habitat, and climate zone
Summary
This study compared the biodegradation rates of three types of biodegradable plastics (PHA, PBSe, PBSeT) versus conventional polyethylene under realistic marine conditions. Results showed that PHA degraded rapidly at sea while the others performed poorly, highlighting that not all "biodegradable" plastics actually break down quickly in marine environments.
Abstract The performance of the biodegradable plastic materials polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA), polybutylene sebacate (PBSe) and polybutylene sebacate co-terephthalate (PBSeT), and of polyethylene (LDPE) was assessed under marine environmental conditions in a three-tier approach. Biodegradation lab tests (20 °C) were complemented by mesocosm tests (20 °C) with natural sand and seawater and by field tests in the warm-temperate Mediterranean Sea (12 – 30 °C) and in tropical Southeast Asia (29 °C) in three typical coastal scenarios. Plastic film samples were exposed in the eulittoral beach, the pelagic open water and the benthic seafloor and their disintegration monitored over time. We used statistical modelling to predict the half-life for each of the materials under the different environmental conditions to render the experimental results numerically comparable across all experimental conditions applied. The biodegradation performance of the materials differed by orders of magnitude depending on climate, habitat and material and revealed the inaccuracy to generically term a material ‘marine biodegradable’. The half-life t 0.5 of a film of PHA with 85 μm thickness ranged from 54 d on the seafloor in SE Asia to 1247 d in mesocosm pelagic tests. t 0.5 for PBSe (25 μm) ranged from 99 d in benthic SE Asia to 2614 d in mesocosm benthic tests, and for PBSeT t 0.5 ranged from 147 d in the mesocosm eulittoral to 797 d in Mediterranean benthic field tests. For LDPE no biodegradation could be observed. These data can now be used to estimate the persistence of plastic objects should they end up in the marine environments considered here and will help to inform the life cycle (impact) assessment of plastics in the open environment.
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