Plastic Waste Pervasive along the coast
Study: Plastic waste pervasive in Mobile Bay, Gulf of Mexico shorelines | AL.com
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Study: Plastic waste pervasive in Mobile Bay, Gulf of Mexico shorelines
By Lawrence Specker | lspecker@al.com
on June 10, 2016 at 7:02 AM, updated June 10, 2016 at 8:27 AM
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Glitter- and confetti-sized bits of plastic from one of researcher Caitlin Wessel's shore samples are shown in a dish.
"Microplastics" also range down to the microscopic scale. (Photo courtesy of Angela Levins/Dauphin Island Sea Lab)
When the subject of plastic waste in the ocean comes up, many peoples' thoughts turn to the so-called Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a vast swath of water soupy with tiny bits of broken-down plastic.It seems like a faraway problem. But the same plastic residue is pervasive on the shorelines of Mobile Bay and the northern Gulf of Mexico, according to a newly published study conducted by scientists from the Dauphin Island Sea Lab and the University of South Alabama.
"Microplastics were prevalent throughout the bay," reports the resulting paper by Caitlin Wessel, a graduate student in the University of South Alabama Marine Science Department who's doing research for her doctorate at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab. An introductory abstract states that "Microplastics were ubiquitous throughout the area studied" and were present at levels many times higher than what would be expected in the open ocean.
Ultimately, that brings home concerns about the as-yet unknown impacts the particles might have on the marine organisms that ingest them, and even the humans who eat seafood taken from contaminated food chains. It's a field of emerging study, but a NOAA summary document on the issue explains some key concepts: "microplastics" range in size from 5 millimeters down to a billionth of a meter. Some of it is microbeads from cosmetics, fibers from textiles and raw pellets used in the manufacture of plastic items. Some of it, called secondary microplastics, is the bits and pieces of material that used to make up items like plastic bottles, shopping bags, fishing lines and nets.
While the exact environmental impacts aren't fully known, many studies show that marine organisms consume the particles. It's also known that the plastics release some contaminants into the ocean as they degrade, and that they can soak up and concentrate other pollutants, which they then carry into the bodies of the animals that eat them.
"We are confident that there are organisms that are ingesting them," Wessel said. "We know that bivalves are filtering them out of the water column. They've been found in different species of fish, they've been found in a couple of species of crab, one species of lobster, different types of plankton."
It's a worldwide problem, and in that sense it's not a huge surprise to show that it exists in Gulf waters. But in the summer of 2014, Wessel led a study to quantify it. She thinks it is the first study of its kind done in the Gulf.
Others credited with the resulting paper are Grant Lockridge, a Dauphin Island Sea Lab Marine Biologist who designed a system to separate microplastics from sediment samples; David Battiste, a chemist who teaches at USA; and Just Cebrian, a professor in the USA Marine Science Department who is Wessel's advisor.
They identified seven sites around the bay, broke each one down into three stretches and took four samples from the shoreline in each stretch. Four of the sites, generally to the north, were dominated by the flow of freshwater coming out of the Mobile-Tensaw Delta. The other three – one on Dauphin Island, one on the Fort Morgan peninsula and one on the Eastern Shore – were dominated by the tides and currents of the Gulf.
One strong and somewhat surprising pattern emerged: the concentration of plastic particles was three to four times higher in the saltwater shorelines than in the freshwater areas.
"I was actually really surprised by that," Wessel said. "I was not expecting it. It kind of made sense once I started thinking about it."
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Dauphin Island Sea Lab researcher Caitlin Wessel works to separate plastic particles from a shoreline sediment sample.
(Photo courtesy of Angela Levins/Dauphin Island Sea Lab)
If you see plastic on the pier, PLEASE pick it up and dispose of it before it gets blown or kicked overboard and contributes to the problem!