logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Microplastics distribution in the Eurasian Arctic is affected by Atlantic waters and Siberian rivers

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Microplastics distribution in the Eurasian Arctic is affected by Atlantic waters and Siberian rivers

E. Yakushev, A. Gebruk, et al.

This groundbreaking study examines the distribution of microplastics in the Eurasian Arctic, revealing crucial insights into how Atlantic waters and Siberian rivers contribute to varying microplastic concentrations. Conducted by an expert team of researchers, the findings suggest that these water masses play a vital role in microplastic dispersion, with significant implications for environmental monitoring and water quality assessment.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Plastic pollution is globally recognised as a threat to marine ecosystems, habitats, and wildlife, and it has now reached remote locations such as the Arctic Ocean. Nevertheless, the distribution of microplastics in the Eurasian Arctic is particularly underreported. Here we present analyses of 60 subsurface pump water samples and 48 surface neuston net samples from the Eurasian Arctic with the goal to quantify and classify microplastics in relation to oceanographic conditions. In our study area, we found on average 0.004 items of microplastics per m³ in the surface samples, and 0.8 items per m³ in the subsurface samples. Microplastic characteristics differ significantly between Atlantic surface water, Polar surface water and discharge plumes of the Great Siberian Rivers, allowing identification of two sources of microplastic pollution (p < 0.05 for surface area, morphology, and polymer types). The highest weight concentration of microplastics was observed within surface waters of Atlantic origin. Siberian river discharge was identified as the second largest source. We conclude that these water masses govern the distribution of microplastics in the Eurasian Arctic. The microplastics properties (i.e. abundance, polymer type, size, weight concentrations) can be used for identification of the water masses.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
Feb 03, 2021
Authors
Evgeniy Yakushev, Anna Gebruk, Alexander Osadchiev, Svetlana Pakhomova, Amy Lusher, Anfisa Berezina, Bert van Bavel, Elena Vorozheikina, Denis Chernykh, Glafira Kolbasova, Ilia Razgon, Igor Semiletov
Tags
microplastics
Eurasian Arctic
Atlantic waters
Siberian rivers
water mass distribution
environmental monitoring
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny