Turner Andrew
School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus Plymouth PL4 8AA, UK.
Water Res X. 2021 Jul 27;12:100110. doi: 10.1016/j.wroa.2021.100110. eCollection 2021 Aug 1.
Because paint particles consist of a resin (polymer) combined with one or more additives, they bear compositional similarities with microplastics. Despite these shared characteristics, however, paint particles are often undetected, deliberately overlooked or evade classification in the pool of micro-debris (all synthetic debris of < 5 mm in size), and in particular in the marine setting where an extensive body of microplastic literature exists. Accordingly, the present paper provides a critical insight into the physico-chemical properties, sources, distributions, behaviour and toxicity of paint particles in the marine environment. Paint particles contain a greater proportion of additives than plastics and, consequently, are more brittle, angular, opaque, dense, heterogeneous and layered than microplastics of equivalent dimensions. Land-based sources of paint particles, including deteriorating or disturbed coatings on roads and building, are transported to the ocean with other microplastics via urban runoff, water treatment facilities and the atmosphere. However, inputs of paint particles are enhanced significantly and more directly by the disturbance, erosion and weathering of coatings on coastal structures, boats and ships. Estimates of paint particle emissions to the marine environment vary widely, with calculated contributions to the total synthetic micro-debris input as high as 35%. Upper estimates are consistent with available (albeit limited) quantitative information on the relative abundance of paint particles amongst synthetic material captured by sea surface trawls and ingested by marine animals. Of greatest environmental concern is the high chemical toxicity of paint particles compared with similarly-sized microplastics and other synthetic debris. This results from the contemporary and historical use of high concentrations of hazardous inorganic additives in marine antifouling and land-based paints, and the relatively ready mobilisation of harmful ions, like Cu/Cu, TBT, Pb and CrO , from the matrix. Recommendations arising from this review include greater use of particulate capturing devices, waste collection systems and recycling facilities during paint disturbance, raising awareness of the potential impacts of discarded paint amongst users, and alerting the microplastic community to the significance of paint particles and developing means by which they are isolated from environmental samples.
由于油漆颗粒由一种树脂(聚合物)与一种或多种添加剂结合而成,它们与微塑料在成分上有相似之处。然而,尽管有这些共同特征,但油漆颗粒在微碎片(所有尺寸小于5毫米的合成碎片)中往往未被检测到、被故意忽视或逃避分类,尤其是在有大量微塑料文献的海洋环境中。因此,本文对海洋环境中油漆颗粒的物理化学性质、来源、分布、行为和毒性进行了批判性的深入研究。油漆颗粒比塑料含有更大比例的添加剂,因此,与同等尺寸的微塑料相比,它们更脆、有棱角、不透明、密度大、不均匀且有分层。包括道路和建筑物上老化或受损涂层在内的陆源油漆颗粒,通过城市径流、水处理设施和大气与其他微塑料一起被输送到海洋。然而,沿海结构、船只和舰艇上涂层的扰动、侵蚀和风化会显著且更直接地增加油漆颗粒的输入。对海洋环境中油漆颗粒排放的估计差异很大,计算得出其对合成微碎片总输入的贡献高达35%。上限估计与关于海面拖网捕获的合成材料中油漆颗粒相对丰度以及海洋动物摄入情况的现有(尽管有限)定量信息一致。与同等尺寸的微塑料和其他合成碎片相比,油漆颗粒具有高化学毒性,这是最令人担忧的环境问题。这是由于在海洋防污漆和陆基油漆中当代和历史上都使用了高浓度的有害无机添加剂,以及有害离子(如铜/铜、三丁基锡、铅和铬酸盐)相对容易从基质中释放出来。本次综述提出的建议包括在油漆扰动期间更多地使用颗粒捕获装置、废物收集系统和回收设施,提高使用者对废弃油漆潜在影响的认识,并提醒微塑料研究群体注意油漆颗粒的重要性,以及开发将它们从环境样品中分离出来的方法。