The vertical distribution of buoyant plastics at sea: an observationalstudy in the North Atlantic Gyre

Millimetre-sized plastics are numerically abundant and widespread across the world’s ocean surface. These buoyant macroscopic particles can be mixed within the upper water column by turbulent transport. Models indicate that the largest decrease in their concentration occurs within the first few metr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Reisser, Julia Wiener, Slat, Boyan, Noble, Kimberly Denise, Plessis, Katherine Du, Epp, Meredith, Proietti, Maíra Carneiro, Sonneville, Jan de, Becker, Thomas, Pattiaratchi, Charitha
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repositorio.furg.br/handle/1/5819
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-1249-2015
Description
Summary:Millimetre-sized plastics are numerically abundant and widespread across the world’s ocean surface. These buoyant macroscopic particles can be mixed within the upper water column by turbulent transport. Models indicate that the largest decrease in their concentration occurs within the first few metres of water, where in situ observations are very scarce. In order to investigate the depth profile and physical properties of buoyant plastic debris, we used a new type of multi-level trawl at 12 sites within the North Atlantic subtropical gyre to sample from the air–seawater interface to a depth of 5 m, at 0.5m intervals. Our results show that plastic concentrations drop exponentially with water depth, and decay rates decrease with increasing Beaufort number. Furthermore, smaller pieces presented lower rise velocities and were more susceptible to vertical transport. This resulted in higher depth decays of plastic mass concentration (milligramsm????����3) than numerical concentration (piecesm????����3). Further multilevel sampling of plastics will improve our ability to predict at-sea plastic load, size distribution, drifting pattern, and impact on marine species and habitats.