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Modelled transport of benthic marine microplastic pollution in the Nazaré Canyon

Biogeosciences 2013 210 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
A. Ballent, S. Pando, Autun Purser, Manuela Juliano, Laurenz Thomsen

Summary

Researchers characterized the hydrodynamic properties of non-buoyant plastic pellets in the laboratory and used the MOHID ocean model to simulate the transport and dispersal of benthic microplastics within the Nazaré Canyon off the Portuguese coast. The model predicted that canyon hydrodynamics concentrate and redistribute plastic debris from land sources to deep-sea deposition zones.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract. With knowledge of typical hydrodynamic behavior of waste plastic material, models predicting the dispersal of benthic plastics from land sources within the ocean are possible. Here we investigated the hydrodynamic behavior (density, settling velocity and resuspension characteristics) of non-buoyant preproduction plastic pellets in the laboratory. From these results we used the MOHID modelling system to predict what would be the likely transport and deposition pathways of such material in the Nazaré Canyon (Portugal) during the spring/summer months of 2009 and the autumn/winter months of 2011. Model outputs indicated that non-buoyant plastic pellets would likely be transported up and down canyon as a function of tidal forces, with only a minor net down canyon movement resulting from tidal action. The model indicated that transport down canyon was likely greater during the autumn/winter, primarily as a result of occasional mass transport events related to storm activity and internal wave action. Transport rates within the canyon were not predicted to be regular throughout the canyon system, with stretches of the upper canyon acting more as locations of pellet deposition than conduits of pellet transport. Topography and the depths of internal wave action are hypothesized to contribute to this lack of homogeneity in predicted transport.

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