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Marine & Wildlife
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Fragmentation of plastic objects in a laboratory seawater microcosm
Scientific Reports2020
214 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 45
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
A. Dick Vethaak,
Lisa Devriese,
H.A. Leslie
Lisa Devriese,
H.A. Leslie
Lisa Devriese,
Caroline De Tender,
A. Dick Vethaak,
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
H.A. Leslie
H.A. Leslie
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
H.A. Leslie
Lisa Devriese,
Jan Gerritse,
H.A. Leslie
Lisa Devriese,
Caroline De Tender,
Caroline De Tender,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
H.A. Leslie
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
H.A. Leslie
H.A. Leslie
H.A. Leslie
Jan Gerritse,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
Caroline De Tender,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
Lisa Devriese,
Caroline De Tender,
A. Dick Vethaak,
Lisa Devriese,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
Lisa Devriese,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
H.A. Leslie
H.A. Leslie
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
H.A. Leslie
Lisa Devriese,
H.A. Leslie
H.A. Leslie
H.A. Leslie
H.A. Leslie
Caroline De Tender,
Caroline De Tender,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
Jan Gerritse,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
Lisa Devriese,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
Lisa Devriese,
Caroline De Tender,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
Lisa Devriese,
Caroline De Tender,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
A. Dick Vethaak,
H.A. Leslie
Summary
Plastic items in a laboratory seawater microcosm showed weight loss rates ranging from less than 1% per year for polyethylene and polystyrene to 7-27% for compostable plastics over one year, with biofilm formation on surfaces driving some items to sink. The study shows that even in a controlled setting, fragmentation into microplastics begins within the first year of marine exposure.
We studied the fragmentation of conventional thermoplastic and compostable plastic items in a laboratory seawater microcosm. In the microcosm, polyurethane foams, cellulose acetate cigarette filters, and compostable polyester and polylactic acid items readily sank, whereas polyethylene air pouches, latex balloons, polystyrene foams and polypropylene cups remained afloat. Microbial biofilms dominated by Cyanobacteria, Proteobacteria, Planctomycetes and Bacteriodetes grew on the plastics, and caused some of the polyethylene items to sink to the bottom. Electrical resistances (ER) of plastic items decreased as function of time, an indication that seawater had penetrated into microscopic crevices in the plastic that had developed over time. Rate constants for ER decrease in polyethylene items in the microcosm were similar to tensile elongation decrease of polyethylene sheets floating in sea, measured previously by others. Weight loss of plastic items was ≤ 1% per year for polyethylene, polystyrene and polypropylene, 3-5% for latex, polyethylene terephthalate and polyurethane, 15% for cellulose acetate, and 7-27% for polyester and polylactic acid compostable bags. The formation of microplastics observed in the microcosm was responsible for at least part of the weight loss. This study emphasizes the need to obtain experimental data on plastic litter degradation under conditions that are realistic for marine environments.