Reducing Uncertainty and Confronting Ignorance about the Possible Impacts of Weathering Plastic in the Marine Environment
Author(s) -
Annika Jahnke,
Hans Peter H. Arp,
Beate I. Escher,
Berit Gewert,
Elena Gorokhova,
Dana Kühnel,
Martin Ogonowski,
Annegret Potthoff,
Christoph Rummel,
Mechthild SchmittJansen,
Erik Toorman,
Matthew MacLeod
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
environmental science and technology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2328-8930
DOI - 10.1021/acs.estlett.7b00008
Subject(s) - weathering , plastic pollution , environmental science , earth science , ignorance , environmental hazard , astrobiology , geology , microplastics , oceanography , ecology , geochemistry , philosophy , physics , epistemology , biology
Plastic in the global oceans fulfills two of the three conditions for pollution to pose a planetary boundary threat because it is causing planetary-scale exposure that is not readily reversible. Plastic is a planetary boundary threat if it is having a currently unrecognized disruptive effect on a vital Earth system process. Discovering possible unknown effects is likely to be aided by achieving a fuller understanding of the environmental fate of plastic. Weathering of plastic generates microplastic, releases chemical additives, and likely also produces nanoplastic and chemical fragments cleaved from the polymer backbone. However, weathering of plastic in the marine environment is not well understood in terms of time scales for fragmentation and degradation, the evolution of particle morphology and properties, and hazards of the chemical mixture liberated by weathering. Biofilms that form and grow on plastic affect weathering, vertical transport, toxicity, and uptake of plastic by marine organisms and have...
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