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Underestimated Microplastic Pollution Derived from Fishery Activities and “Hidden” in Deep Sediment

Environmental Science & Technology 2020 357 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Baoming Xue, Linlin Zhang, Ruilong Li, Yinghui Wang, Jing Guo, Kefu Yu, Shaopeng Wang

Summary

Scientists measured microplastics in deep sediments of the Beibu Gulf (China) and found that fishing-related activities — particularly concentrated in historical fishing grounds — left distinct microplastic signatures at depth, revealing a hidden fishery-derived plastic legacy in seafloor sediments.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Fishery activities are an important source of microplastic pollution in coastal areas but have received little attention. The Beibu Gulf, a traditional fishing ground of China and the China-Indo Peninsula, was selected in this study, and the focus was on the impacts of fishery activities on the horizontal distribution of microplastics in sediment. The results showed that the dominant contaminants (polypropylene fibers and polyethylene fibers) might originate from the abrasion of fishing gear and contributed to 61.6% of the total abundance of microplastics in surface sediment. The abundance of polypropylene fibers and polyethylene fibers exhibited a strong correlation (R2 = 0.8586, p = 0.015) with values of fishery yields of different districts, which highlighted the effects of different fishery activities on microplastic contamination in marine sediment. Microplastics could be "hidden" in deep sediment to a depth of 60 cm. The estimated storage of microplastics in deep sediment (185 tons) was 5 times that in surface sediment. The assessment of microplastic storage worldwide might be underestimated because most previous studies only examined surface sediment. The abundance distribution and size distribution of microplastics in the sediment core suggested long-term burial of microplastics in deep sediment. Bioturbation might be responsible for the vertical transport of microplastics, leading to "fresh microplastics" preservation in "old sediment".

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