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Understanding the Fragmentation Pattern of Marine Plastic Debris

Environmental Science & Technology 2016 563 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Lucie Ladirat, Lucie Ladirat, Lucie Ladirat, Lucie Ladirat, Lucie Ladirat, Lucie Ladirat, Lucie Ladirat, Lucie Ladirat, Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Emile Pérez, Claire Pusineri, Xavier Gendre, Xavier Gendre, Claire Pusineri, Xavier Gendre, Xavier Gendre, Dominique Goudounèche, Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Dominique Goudounèche, Claire Pusineri, Claire Pusineri, Corinne Routaboul, Claire Pusineri, Dominique Goudounèche, Dominique Goudounèche, Claire Pusineri, Alexandra ter Halle Dominique Goudounèche, Emile Pérez, Alexandra ter Halle Emile Pérez, Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Emile Pérez, Corinne Routaboul, Corinne Routaboul, Emile Pérez, Alexandra ter Halle Christophe Tenailleau, Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Benjamin Duployer, Emile Pérez, Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Emile Pérez, Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle Alexandra ter Halle

Summary

Researchers collected and analyzed marine plastic debris from the North Atlantic to better understand how plastics fragment in the ocean over time. They found that degradation followed predictable patterns, with UV exposure and wave action producing increasingly smaller particles that became more brittle and chemically altered. The study helps explain why estimated microplastic quantities in the ocean account for only about 1% of annual plastic inputs, suggesting much of it fragments into particles too small to detect with current methods.

Study Type Environmental

The global estimation of microplastic afloat in the ocean is only approximately 1% of annual global plastic inputs. This reflects fundamental knowledge gaps in the transformation, fragmentation, and fates of microplastics in the ocean. In order to better understand microplastic fragmentation we proceeded to a thorough physicochemical characterization of samples collected from the North Artlantic subtropical gyre during the sea campaign Expedition seventh Continent in May 2014. The results were confronted with a mathematical approach. The introduction of mass distribution in opposition to the size distribution commonly proposed in this area clarify the fragmentation pattern. The mathematical analysis of the mass distribution points out a lack of debris with mass lighter than 1 mg. Characterization by means of microscopy, microtomography, and infrared microscopy gives a better understanding of the behavior of microplastic at sea. Flat pieces of debris (2 to 5 mm in length) typically have one face that is more photodegraded (due to exposure to the sun) and the other with more biofilm, suggesting that they float in a preferred orientation. Smaller debris, with a cubic shape (below 2 mm), seems to roll at sea. All faces are evenly photodegraded and they are less colonized. The breakpoint in the mathematical model and the experimental observation around 2 mm leads to the conclusion that there is a discontinuity in the rate of fragmentation: we hypothesized that the smaller microplastics, the cubic ones mostly, are fragmented much faster than the parallelepipeds.

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