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Atmospheric microplastic over the South China Sea and East Indian Ocean: abundance, distribution and source
Summary
Researchers measured atmospheric microplastic abundance across 21 transects from coastal China to the East Indian Ocean and found that concentrations near the Pearl River Estuary were ten times higher than over the open ocean, with backward trajectory modeling suggesting long-range atmospheric transport exceeding 1,000 km but indicating that atmospheric deposition is unlikely to be the primary source of oceanic microplastic contamination.
At present, microplastic (MP) is pervasive globally and has a regional difference. Recent studies have identified MP in the terrestrial atmospheric environment. However, the connection between terrigenous atmospheric MP emissions and impacts over the ocean is not well known. Here, we present the distribution of atmospheric MP abundance over the ocean based on a transoceanic survey conducted across 21 sampling transects from the Pearl River Estuary (PRE) to the South China Sea (SCS) and then to the East Indian Ocean (EIO). The abundance of atmospheric MP over the PRE (4.2 ± 2.5 items/100 m) was significantly higher than that over the EIO (0.4 ± 0.6 items/100 m). However, the abundance of atmospheric MP in the SCS (0.8 ± 1.3 items/100 m) was not significantly different from the EIO and PRE. This result revealed that MP undergoes long-range transport, more than 1000 km away, through the atmosphere, but atmospheric MP transmission as the main source of oceanic MP based on transoceanic studies is not a plausible assumption. Furthermore, backward trajectory model analysis of 21 sampling transects preliminary showed the potential sources of atmospheric MP over the PRE, SCS, and EIO.