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Field and mesocosm methods to test biodegradable plastic film under marine conditions

2020 11 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 25 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Christian Lott, Christian Lott, Christian Lott, Christian Lott, Christian Lott, Andreas Eich, Andreas Eich, Andreas Eich, Miriam Weber Andreas Eich, Miriam Weber Miriam Weber Andreas Eich, Andreas Eich, Andreas Eich, Christian Lott, Christian Lott, Boris Unger, Boris Unger, Miriam Weber Dorothée Makarow, Dorothée Makarow, Boris Unger, Glauco Battagliarin, Miriam Weber Christian Lott, Dorothée Makarow, Dorothée Makarow, Glauco Battagliarin, Boris Unger, Miriam Weber Glauco Battagliarin, Christian Lott, Glauco Battagliarin, Glauco Battagliarin, Glauco Battagliarin, Andreas Eich, Markus T. Lasut, Katharina Schlegel, Glauco Battagliarin, Glauco Battagliarin, Glauco Battagliarin, Miriam Weber Katharina Schlegel, Christian Lott, Markus T. Lasut, Christian Lott, Glauco Battagliarin, Miriam Weber Miriam Weber Miriam Weber Christian Lott, Miriam Weber Miriam Weber Miriam Weber Miriam Weber Miriam Weber

Summary

Researchers developed and tested new field and mesocosm methods to assess the fate of biodegradable plastic films under real marine conditions. Reliable marine field testing methods are needed to evaluate whether biodegradable plastics actually degrade in ocean environments or persist like conventional plastics.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Abstract The pollution of the natural environment, especially the world’s oceans, with conventional plastic is of major concern. Biodegradable plastics are an emerging market bringing along potential chances and risks. The fate of these materials in the environment and their possible effects on organisms and ecosystems has rarely been studied systematically and is not well understood. For the marine environment, reliable field test methods and standards for assessing and certifying biodegradation to bridge laboratory respirometric data are lacking. In this work we present newly developed field tests to assess the performance of (biodegradable) plastics under natural marine conditions. These methods were successfully applied and validated in three coastal habitats (eulittoral, benthic and pelagic) and two climate zones (Mediterranean Sea and tropical Southeast Asia). Additionally, a stand-alone mesocosm test system which integrated all three habitats in one technical system at 400-L scale independent from running seawater is presented as a methodological bridge. Films of polyhydroxyalkanoate copolymer (PHA) and low density polyethylene (LD-PE) were used to validate the tests. While LD-PE remained intact, PHA disintegrated to a varying degree depending on the habitat and the climate zone. Together with the existing laboratory standard test methods, the field and mesocosm test systems presented in this work provide a 3-tier testing scheme for the reliable assessment of the biodegradation of (biodegradable) plastic in the marine environment. This toolset of tests can be adapted to other aquatic ecosystems.

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