Source And Fate Of Microplastics Fibers In The Ocean - A Case Of Study
In Newtown Creek And Flushing Bay
Abstract
Several studies have confirmed the ubiquitous presence of microplastics
in marine environments and marine animals at different trophic levels.
Understanding how they reach the ocean is crucial for adopting
sustainable policies that help mitigate their spread and arrest their
detrimental impacts on aquatic ecosystems. Since wastewater treatment
plants are considered a potential pathway of microplastics into the
marine environment, in this study, we attempted to quantify synthetic
microfiber loss during domestic washing. Additionally, we examined the
presence of microfibers in water and sediment samples from Newtown Creek
and Flushing Bay, because these water bodies receive wastewater from
treatment plants that cater to highly urbanized locations of New York
City. Fabrics with different percentages and types of polymers were
washed with and without detergent. In both variants, Tencel, an organic
material, had the biggest mass loss. In addition, clothes shed 50 to
90% more fibers when detergent was used. Likewise, during the drying
cycle, fiber loss increased up to 35 times more than the loss during the
washing process alone, especially in mixtures containing nylon. Finally,
microplastics comprising of fragments, beads, and fibers ranging from to
0.05 mm to 3.5 mm that were encountered were quantified and
characterized in the creek and bay water and sediment samples to assess
their distribution and fate in the aquatic environment.