Large Lakes Observatory and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Minnesota, Duluth, 2205 East 5th St, Duluth, MN 55812, USA.
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Minnesota Duluth, 1039 University Drive, Duluth, MN 55812, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2020 Nov 20;744:140824. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.140824. Epub 2020 Jul 12.
The abundance of microplastics in natural systems is a concern even in relatively pristine areas such as Lake Superior, on the border between the United States and Canada. In this study, beach sand and surface water were sampled in the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore (APIS) in May and July 2018. Additional sand samples were collected at non-APIS beaches in western Lake Superior in May 2018. Microlitter particles (<4 mm), consisting of microplastics and other low-density particles, were enumerated. Microplastics in sand samples, as identified by melt test, exhibited low abundances (0 to 55 particles/kg dry weight) and were mainly fibers. Microplastics in water samples were also low in abundance (9000 to 40,000 particles/km) and were mostly fibers. Pyrolysis gas chromatography (pyGCMS) analysis was performed on a subset of microplastics from the sand and water samples. All particles with identifiable mass spectra were polyethylene. When beach sands were processed by density fractionation and filtration, the resulting microlitter samples also contained 260 to 2630 non-plastic particles per kg dry weight. A subset of these non-melting particles was analyzed by Scanning Electron Microscopy/Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy (SEM/EDS). Results indicated that both organic and inorganic particles were included within non-plastic microlitter. Re-analysis of additional aliquots of the same sand samples using oxidation in addition to density fractionation reduced the number of non-plastic particles by roughly half, further highlighting that many of these were organic. Post-oxidation surface-water microlitter (333 μm to 4 mm) also contained non-plastic low-density particles, which comprised 29 to 47% of the total microlitter particle counts. Based upon color distributions, non-plastic microlitter particles in sand and water samples include a small portion of particles identifiable as anthropogenic. The sources for many microlitter particles cannot be distinguished at present and may be natural in origin.
即使在像美国和加拿大边境的苏必利尔湖这样相对原始的地区,自然系统中微塑料的丰富度也是一个令人担忧的问题。在这项研究中,于 2018 年 5 月和 7 月在使徒群岛国家湖岸(APIS)采集了海滩砂和地表水样本。2018 年 5 月还在苏必利尔湖西部的非 APIS 海滩采集了额外的砂样本。对<4 毫米的微碎屑颗粒(包括微塑料和其他低密度颗粒)进行了计数。通过熔融试验识别的砂样中的微塑料含量较低(0 至 55 个颗粒/千克干重),主要为纤维。水样中的微塑料含量也较低(9000 至 40000 个颗粒/千米),主要为纤维。对来自砂和水样的微塑料进行了一部分的热解气相色谱(pyGCMS)分析。具有可识别质谱的所有颗粒均为聚乙烯。当海滩砂经过密度分级和过滤处理时,得到的微碎屑样品中每千克干重还含有 260 至 2630 个非塑料颗粒。对这些非熔化颗粒的一部分进行了扫描电子显微镜/能量色散 X 射线能谱分析(SEM/EDS)。结果表明,非塑料微碎屑中包含有机和无机颗粒。在用密度分级和氧化法对相同砂样的另外等分试样进行重新分析后,非塑料颗粒的数量减少了大约一半,进一步表明其中许多是有机的。经氧化处理后的地表水微碎屑(333 微米至 4 毫米)也含有非塑料低密度颗粒,占总微碎屑颗粒计数的 29%至 47%。根据颜色分布,砂和水样中非塑料微碎屑颗粒中包含一小部分可识别为人造的颗粒。目前无法区分许多微碎屑颗粒的来源,它们可能来自天然。