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Abundance and characteristics of microfibers detected in sediment trap material from the deep subtropical North Atlantic Ocean

The Science of The Total Environment 2020 63 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Janika Reineccius, Jana-Sophie Appelt, Theda Hinrichs, David Kaiser, Judith S. Stern, Ralf D. Prien, Joanna J Waniek

Summary

Researchers analyzed microfibers collected in sediment traps from the deep subtropical North Atlantic Ocean to characterize their abundance and composition, finding that synthetic fibers are transported through the water column and deposited in deep-sea sediments. The study helps quantify the role of atmospheric and surface inputs in delivering fibrous microplastics to deep marine environments.

Study Type Environmental

Plastics and microplastics increasingly gain importance due to their perils and wide distribution in the marine environment. Microfibers account for the largest percentage of anthropogenic-induced microparticles, which inter alia, consist of plastic, and are found in deep-sea sediments. However, the sinking of fibers from the surface through the water column to the seafloor is still poorly understood. The present study investigates microfibers extracted from sediment trap samples, which were deployed in the North Atlantic Subtropical Gyre (NASG). The average result of eleven analyzed samples showed 913 microfibers per gram of collected particle flux material, with a predominant fiber length shorter than 1 mm (75.6%) and a distribution maximum between 0.2 and 0.4 mm. Further, the average number of microfibers found in this study was used to derive microfiber fluxes for the NASG based on the deployment time of the sediment trap. Extrapolating the computed flux of 94 microfibers m−2 day−1 to the entire NASG area would correspond to a total microfiber mass flux of 9800 t a−1 or 73 × 1013 microfibers a−1 of sinking microfibers through the water column. These findings offer an extended application of sediment traps to monitor microfiber fluxes, which reveals the opportunity to investigate the mechanism driving sinking of microfibers and microplastics into the deep open ocean.

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