Louisiana State University, College of the Coast and Environment, Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA.
Louisiana State University, College of the Coast and Environment, Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA.
Environ Pollut. 2017 Nov;230:798-809. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.07.030. Epub 2017 Aug 10.
Accumulation of marine debris is a global problem that affects the oceans on multiple scales. The majority of floating marine debris is composed of microplastics: plastic particles up to 5 mm in diameter. With similar sizes and appearances to natural food items, these small fragments pose potential risks to many marine organisms including zooplankton and zooplanktivores. Semi-enclosed seas are reported to have high concentrations of microplastics, however, the distribution and concentration of microplastics in one such system, the Gulf of Mexico, remains unknown. Our study documented and characterized microplastics in continental shelf waters off the Louisiana coast in the northern Gulf of Mexico, using bongo nets, neuston nets, and Niskin bottles. Additionally, we compared the size distributions of microplastics and zooplankton collected using the nets. Plastics were manually sorted from the samples, documented, and measured using digital microscopy. Confirmation of putative plastics was carried out by hydrofluoric acid digestion and a subsample was analyzed using FTIR microscopy. Estimated concentrations of microplastics collected on the inner continental shelf during this study are among the highest reported globally. Total microplastic concentrations ranged from 4.8 to 8.2 particles m and 5.0-18.4 particles m for the bongo and neuston samples, respectively. Niskin bottles collected smaller plastic particles than the nets and indicated total microplastic concentrations (primarily fibers) from 6.0E4 - 15.7E4 particles m. Microplastic concentrations were greater than the abundances of all but four of the five most abundant taxa from bongo nets and were not statistically different from the abundances of any of the most numerous taxa from neuston nets. Sizes of microplastics and zooplankton partially or completely overlapped, suggesting the potential for confusion with natural prey.
海洋垃圾的积累是一个全球性问题,它在多个尺度上影响着海洋。大部分漂浮的海洋垃圾是由微塑料组成的:直径可达 5 毫米的塑料颗粒。这些小碎片与天然食物具有相似的大小和外观,对许多海洋生物构成潜在风险,包括浮游动物和食浮游动物的鱼类。据报道,半封闭海域的微塑料浓度较高,然而,墨西哥湾这样一个系统中的微塑料分布和浓度仍然未知。我们的研究使用延绳钓网、浮游生物网和采水器在墨西哥湾北部路易斯安那州沿海大陆架水域记录并描述了微塑料的特征。此外,我们比较了用网收集的微塑料和浮游动物的大小分布。从样本中手动分拣出塑料,用数字显微镜记录并测量。通过氢氟酸消化对疑似塑料进行了确认,并对一部分样本进行了傅里叶变换红外显微镜分析。本研究在内陆架采集的微塑料浓度估计值在全球报告中属于最高之列。微塑料的总浓度范围为每立方米 4.8 到 8.2 个颗粒和每立方米 5.0 到 18.4 个颗粒,分别来自延绳钓网和浮游生物网的样本。采水器采集到的塑料颗粒比网小,指示的总微塑料浓度(主要是纤维)为每立方米 6.0E4 到 15.7E4 个颗粒。微塑料浓度大于延绳钓网中除四个最丰富分类群之外的所有分类群的丰度,且与浮游生物网中任何最丰富分类群的丰度均无统计学差异。微塑料的大小与浮游动物的大小部分或完全重叠,表明与天然猎物混淆的可能性。