0
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. Sign in to save

Surface waters meso- and micro-litter around the Western Antarctic Peninsula: Are the South Shetland Islands a pollution hotspot?

Environmental research 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Pere Monràs-Riera, Luis Francisco Ruiz-Orejón, Carlos Angulo-Preckler, Rafael Sardá, Conxita Avila

Summary

Researchers surveyed meso- and micro-litter in surface waters around the Western Antarctic Peninsula and South Shetland Islands across two summer seasons, providing one of the broadest assessments of marine debris in Antarctica. Even this remote polar region showed widespread plastic contamination, with fragments and lines dominating the debris found.

Polymers
Body Systems
Study Type Environmental

Not even the most remote and pristine oceanic regions, such as the Southern Ocean, are immune to the impacts of marine litter. This study presents novel data on surface waters meso- and micro-litter along the Western Antarctic Peninsula and Livingston Island (South Shetland Islands) across two summer campaigns (2022-2023), providing one of the broadest assessments of marine debris in Antarctica (62° S to 67° S). Litter was detected at all sampling sites, with abundances ranging from 0.019 ± 0.033 to 0.193 ± 0.104 items m along the Western Antarctic Peninsula (average: 0.086 ± 0.082 items m). The South Shetland Islands exhibited significantly higher litter abundances compared to higher-latitude sites. Our results show that litter distribution correlates with human activity intensity, with latitude and the personnel density of nearby research stations as key influencing factors. The South Shetland Islands emerged as an Antarctic marine litter hotspot, likely driven by the concentration of Antarctic facilities and other anthropogenic activities. Litter was primarily composed of synthetic fibres, especially polyester and nylon, pointing to local human sources. Additionally, a decrease in marine litter was observed at Livingston Island between campaigns, with abundance declining from 0.235 ± 0.152 items m to 0.116 ± 0.033 items m. This highlights the need for ongoing monitoring to capture interannual variability, avoid seasonal biases, and better understand marine litter dynamics in the Southern Ocean to guide conservation efforts. These findings underscore human impact in Antarctica and the urgent need for better waste management and stricter environmental regulation enforcement.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Quantification and distribution of marine microdebris in the surface waters of Livingston Island (South Shetland Islands, Antarctica).

Researchers quantified microdebris in surface waters of two bays on Livingston Island, Antarctica, finding plastic pollution in all samples at a mean concentration of 0.264 items/m², with polyester fibres dominating (61.67%) and distribution patterns suggesting local Antarctic activities as the primary contamination source.

Article Tier 2

Floating macro- and microplastics around the Southern Ocean: Results from the Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition

Researchers surveyed floating macro- and microplastic pollution around the Southern Ocean islands, providing baseline abundance estimates for high southern latitudes. The data reveal that plastic contamination extends even to remote polar regions, with seabirds in the area confirmed to have been ingesting plastics since at least the 1960s.

Article Tier 2

Distribution characteristics of microplastics in surface and subsurface Antarctic seawater

Researchers characterized microplastic distribution in both surface and subsurface Antarctic seawater, finding plastic contamination present at multiple depths and dominated by fibers and fragments, highlighting that even remote polar waters are affected by plastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Plastics in sea surface waters around the Antarctic Peninsula

Surface trawls in Antarctic Peninsula waters found a mean plastic debris concentration of 1,794 items/km² and 27.8 g/km², with roughly equal proportions of mesoplastics and microplastics composed mostly of polyurethane, polyamide, and polyethylene. Oceanographic modeling traced the debris origin to areas including the southern tip of South America and the Falkland Islands, demonstrating remote-source contamination of Antarctic waters.

Article Tier 2

Occurrence and distribution patterns of small microplastics (11-500µm) in the southern weddell sea off antarctica

Researchers assessed small microplastics in the 11-500 micron size range in the Southern Ocean, a region considered remote and pristine, filling a gap left by prior studies that focused on larger particles. Microplastics were detected even in this remote marine environment, suggesting widespread dispersal beyond populated regions.

Share this paper