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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Microplastics affect marine snow formation and sinking to the ocean's interior

Water Research 2025 Score: 38 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Madeline Olivia, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Wei‐Min Wu Ruei-Feng Shiu, Madeline Olivia, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Madeline Olivia, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Gwo‐Ching Gong, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Madeline Olivia, Gwo‐Ching Gong, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Ruei-Feng Shiu, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Wei‐Min Wu Gwo‐Ching Gong, An‐Yi Tsai, An‐Yi Tsai, Gwo‐Ching Gong, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Wei‐Min Wu Ruei-Feng Shiu, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Gwo‐Ching Gong, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Ruei-Feng Shiu, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Hung-Chu Hsu, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Ruei-Feng Shiu, Hung-Chu Hsu, Gwo‐Ching Gong, Gwo‐Ching Gong, Wei‐Min Wu Gwo‐Ching Gong, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu An‐Yi Tsai, Wei‐Min Wu Ruei-Feng Shiu, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu An‐Yi Tsai, Gwo‐Ching Gong, Wei‐Min Wu Ruei-Feng Shiu, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Ruei-Feng Shiu, Gwo‐Ching Gong, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu

Summary

Researchers conducted laboratory and onboard ship incubations to investigate how microplastics influence marine snow formation and sinking behavior, finding that microplastics significantly enhanced aggregate formation by providing hydrophobic interfaces that promote adhesion with organic matter, with polymer density and morphology modulating aggregate sinking rates.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) are ubiquitous in the ocean and increasingly found embedded within marine snow (MS), organic-rich particle aggregates that play a central role in vertical carbon and MP flux. This study combined laboratory and onboard incubations to investigate how MPs influence the formation and sinking behavior of MS aggregates. Our data indicated that MPs significantly enhanced MS aggregation in both settings, likely by providing hydrophobic interfaces that promote entanglement and adhesion with organic matter. The polymer density and morphology of MPs further modulated aggregate sinking dynamics and structure. Dense polyethylene terephthalate (PET) pellets formed fast-sinking aggregates, whereas buoyant polyethylene (PE) and fibrous PET formed looser, slower-sinking structures. These differences often resulted in sinking rates lower than theoretical predictions, especially for larger and more irregular aggregates. Our findings suggest that MP incorporation into MS can enhance aggregate production, alter settling rates, and facilitate MP entry into food webs, with potential consequences for carbon transport and marine ecosystems.

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