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Plastic debris in the open ocean

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TLDR
Using data from the Malaspina 2010 circumnavigation, regional surveys, and previously published reports, this work shows a worldwide distribution of plastic on the surface of the open ocean, mostly accumulating in the convergence zones of each of the five subtropical gyres with comparable density.
Abstract
There is a rising concern regarding the accumulation of floating plastic debris in the open ocean. However, the magnitude and the fate of this pollution are still open questions. Using data from the Malaspina 2010 circumnavigation, regional surveys, and previously published reports, we show a worldwide distribution of plastic on the surface of the open ocean, mostly accumulating in the convergence zones of each of the five subtropical gyres with comparable density. However, the global load of plastic on the open ocean surface was estimated to be on the order of tens of thousands of tons, far less than expected. Our observations of the size distribution of floating plastic debris point at important size-selective sinks removing millimeter-sized fragments of floating plastic on a large scale. This sink may involve a combination of fast nano-fragmentation of the microplastic into particles of microns or smaller, their transference to the ocean interior by food webs and ballasting processes, and processes yet to be discovered. Resolving the fate of the missing plastic debris is of fundamental importance to determine the nature and significance of the impacts of plastic pollution in the ocean.

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Anthropogenic litter is abundant, diverse, and mobile in urban rivers: Insights from cross‐ecosystem analyses using ecosystem and community ecology tools

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Characteristics of microplastics ingested by zooplankton from the Bohai Sea, China.

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Plastic pollution in water ecosystems: A bibliometric analysis from 2000 to 2020

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A critical examination of the role of marine snow and zooplankton faecal pellets in removing ocean surface microplastic

TL;DR: In this article, the authors applied previously published data on MP concentrations in the surface ocean to an earth system model of intermediate complexity to produce the first estimate of the potential global sequestration of MP by marine aggregates, including faecal pellets, and found that presently, aggregates alone would have the potential to remove most existing surface ocean MP to the seafloor within less than 2 years if pollution ceases.
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Boops boops as a bioindicator of microplastic pollution along the Spanish Catalan coast

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microplastics in the marine environment

TL;DR: The mechanisms of generation and potential impacts of microplastics in the ocean environment are discussed, and the increasing levels of plastic pollution of the oceans are understood, it is important to better understand the impact of microPlastic in the Ocean food web.
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Lost at sea: where is all the plastic?

TL;DR: It is shown that microscopic plastic fragments and fibers are also widespread in the marine environment and may persist for centuries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accumulation and fragmentation of plastic debris in global environments.

TL;DR: Global plastics production and the accumulation of plastic waste are documented, showing that trends in mega- and macro-plastic accumulation rates are no longer uniformly increasing and that the average size of plastic particles in the environment seems to be decreasing.
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Microplastics in the Marine Environment: A Review of the Methods Used for Identification and Quantification

TL;DR: This review of 68 studies compares the methodologies used for the identification and quantification of microplastics from the marine environment and suggests standardized sampling procedures which allow the spatiotemporal comparison ofmicroplastic abundance across marine environments.
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How does plastic goes to ocean are the global concern on plastic pollution?

Plastic debris enters the ocean through various sources such as littering, improper waste management, and runoff from land. The global concern on plastic pollution is increasing due to its harmful impacts on marine ecosystems.