Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station, Oregon State University, Corvallis, USA.
Environmental Services Department, Orange County Sanitation District, Fountain Valley, USA.
Appl Spectrosc. 2020 Sep;74(9):1099-1125. doi: 10.1177/0003702820945713.
Plastic pollution is a defining environmental contaminant and is considered to be one of the greatest environmental threats of the Anthropocene, with its presence documented across aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. The majority of this plastic debris falls into the micro (1 μm-5 mm) or nano (1-1000 nm) size range and comes from primary and secondary sources. Its small size makes it cumbersome to isolate and analyze reproducibly, and its ubiquitous distribution creates numerous challenges when controlling for background contamination across matrices (e.g., sediment, tissue, water, air). Although research on microplastics represents a relatively nascent subfield, burgeoning interest in questions surrounding the fate and effects of these debris items creates a pressing need for harmonized sampling protocols and quality control approaches. For results across laboratories to be reproducible and comparable, it is imperative that guidelines based on vetted protocols be readily available to research groups, many of which are either new to plastics research or, as with any new subfield, have arrived at current approaches through a process of trial-and-error rather than in consultation with the greater scientific community. The goals of this manuscript are to (i) outline the steps necessary to conduct general as well as matrix-specific quality assurance and quality control based on sample type and associated constraints, (ii) briefly review current findings across matrices, and (iii) provide guidance for the design of sampling regimes. Specific attention is paid to the source of microplastic pollution as well as the pathway by which contamination occurs, with details provided regarding each step in the process from generating appropriate questions to sampling design and collection.
塑料污染是一种具有定义性的环境污染物,被认为是人类世最大的环境威胁之一,其存在已在水生和陆地生态系统中得到证实。这些塑料碎片中的大部分属于微(1μm-5mm)或纳米(1-1000nm)尺寸范围,来自于主要和次要来源。由于其体积小,难以进行重复性的隔离和分析,并且其无处不在的分布使得在控制基质(如沉积物、组织、水、空气)中的背景污染时面临许多挑战。尽管微塑料研究是一个相对新兴的子领域,但人们对这些碎片的命运和影响的问题日益关注,这就迫切需要协调一致的采样协议和质量控制方法。为了使实验室之间的结果具有可重复性和可比性,至关重要的是,研究小组可以随时获得基于经过验证的协议的指南,许多研究小组要么是新涉足塑料研究领域,要么就像任何新的子领域一样,通过反复试验而不是与更广泛的科学界协商,才采用了当前的方法。本文的目的是:(i)概述根据样品类型和相关约束条件进行一般以及基质特异性质量保证和质量控制所需的步骤;(ii)简要回顾当前在各种基质中的发现;(iii)为采样方案的设计提供指导。特别关注微塑料污染的来源以及污染发生的途径,并详细介绍了从提出相关问题到采样设计和收集的过程中的每个步骤。