E3S Web of Conferences (Jan 2021)

The origin of microplastics of offshore discharge: A review in assessing the relationship between microplastics content and other contaminants

  • Liu Yang,
  • Yan Shiqi,
  • Yuan Zehui

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202130801013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 308
p. 01013

Abstract

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The article reviewed migration, degradation, toxicity, and distribution of microplastics, which was focused on data enumeration of emission samples from countries around the North Pacific Ocean, South Atlantic Ocean, and Circumpolar oceans. Microplastic particles are easily absorbed by animals and spread to the whole food chain, and they have been confirmed to exist in the human body. It was well established that high abundance microplastics were trapped by ocean currents and accumulated in surface and sediment in convergence zones of the five subtropical gyres. While microplastic itself leaches out the toxin in the seawater, synergistic effects between microplastic and other pollutants increase microplastic toxicity for organisms. The monomers of 16 out of 55 plastic polymers were carcinogenic and mutagenic or toxic for reproduction. Additives used in the process are also dangerous polypropylene (PP), and polyethylene (PE) prefer to sorb persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and have an extremely slow rate of desorption, which form synergic effects and increase the toxicity of microplastics (MPs). For other plastic polymers, the sorption and desorption of pollutants by MPs depends on the concentration of POPs, so the toxicity of MPs varies with the content of pollutants. But for some types of MPs and POPs, the concentration of POPs controlled by microplastics also can decrease the lethal toxicity of POPs. Higher concentrations of MPs in the seawater cause larger MPs consumptions of marine organisms, especially in polar regains that have the highest MPs concentrations.