Distributional patterns of microplastics in sediment samples from coastal (Oslofjord, Norway) and deep (North-eastern Greenland Sea slope; Kveithola Trough, Barents Sea) marine environments

Versatility, stability and low production costs have fuelled global demand for plastic products. As a result of the increase in production, the amount of plastic waste has also increased. Marine plastic debris arises from land disposal, wastewater treatment processes, construction, disposal at sea a...

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Main Author: BRONZO, LAURA
Other Authors: Morigi, Caterina, Lusher, Amy L., Bini, Monica
Format: Text
Language:Italian
Published: Pisa University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.adm.unipi.it/theses/available/etd-09022020-102853/
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author BRONZO, LAURA
author2 Morigi, Caterina
Lusher, Amy L.
Bini, Monica
author_facet BRONZO, LAURA
author_sort BRONZO, LAURA
collection Università di Pisa: ETD (Electronic Theses and Dissertations)
description Versatility, stability and low production costs have fuelled global demand for plastic products. As a result of the increase in production, the amount of plastic waste has also increased. Marine plastic debris arises from land disposal, wastewater treatment processes, construction, disposal at sea and the breakdown of in-use plastic item, such as fishing gears. Once at sea plastics can be redistributed by ocean currents and the environmental conditions caused them to be weathered and/or colonised by organisms. These processes lead to a breakdown of plastic items into smaller fragments, changing their properties (more dense, fast sinking rate, etc.) leading them to the seafloor. Therefore, ocean sediments are regarded as the ultimate destination for small plastic particles. Microplastics (<1 mm) besides the degradation of larger plastic items, also include those items which are produced in the micro-size range such as micro-pellets and powers. It is crucial to understand which are the main pattern of distribution to assess which environments could be mainly influenced by the occurrence of plastic debris. This study presents the record of plastic contamination in sediments samples from three different benthic domains, all related to Norwegian waters including the first observation of microplastic contamination in the Kveithola Trough. Three cores were sampled from the Oslofjord, in locations characterised by almost shallow waters (~100 m); two sediment cores were sampled from deep environments (1320 – 1650 m) in the North-eastern slope of the Greenland Sea close to the Svalbard archipelago; and finally, two from Kveithola, a trough engraved on the margin of the shallow Barents Sea bank (230 – 340 m). Plastic particles were detected in every core analysed using a high-density separation approach (NaI, 1.8 g cm-3). Each plastic particle was described based on its morphology (size, shape, colour) under an optical microscope. Further, the polymeric origin of particles was chemically confirmed using Attenuated Total ...
format Text
genre Barents Sea
Greenland
Greenland Sea
Svalbard
genre_facet Barents Sea
Greenland
Greenland Sea
Svalbard
geographic Barents Sea
Greenland
Norway
Svalbard
Svalbard Archipelago
geographic_facet Barents Sea
Greenland
Norway
Svalbard
Svalbard Archipelago
id ftunivpisa:oai:etd.adm.unipi.it:etd-09022020-102853
institution Open Polar
language Italian
op_collection_id ftunivpisa
op_relation http://etd.adm.unipi.it/theses/available/etd-09022020-102853/
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Copyright information available at source archive
op_source http://etd.adm.unipi.it/theses/available/etd-09022020-102853/
publishDate 2020
publisher Pisa University
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivpisa:oai:etd.adm.unipi.it:etd-09022020-102853 2025-01-16T21:11:45+00:00 Distributional patterns of microplastics in sediment samples from coastal (Oslofjord, Norway) and deep (North-eastern Greenland Sea slope; Kveithola Trough, Barents Sea) marine environments BRONZO, LAURA Morigi, Caterina Lusher, Amy L. Bini, Monica 2020-09-20 application/pdf http://etd.adm.unipi.it/theses/available/etd-09022020-102853/ it ita Pisa University http://etd.adm.unipi.it/theses/available/etd-09022020-102853/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Copyright information available at source archive http://etd.adm.unipi.it/theses/available/etd-09022020-102853/ SCIENZE DELLA TERRA text 2020 ftunivpisa 2023-10-03T22:57:54Z Versatility, stability and low production costs have fuelled global demand for plastic products. As a result of the increase in production, the amount of plastic waste has also increased. Marine plastic debris arises from land disposal, wastewater treatment processes, construction, disposal at sea and the breakdown of in-use plastic item, such as fishing gears. Once at sea plastics can be redistributed by ocean currents and the environmental conditions caused them to be weathered and/or colonised by organisms. These processes lead to a breakdown of plastic items into smaller fragments, changing their properties (more dense, fast sinking rate, etc.) leading them to the seafloor. Therefore, ocean sediments are regarded as the ultimate destination for small plastic particles. Microplastics (<1 mm) besides the degradation of larger plastic items, also include those items which are produced in the micro-size range such as micro-pellets and powers. It is crucial to understand which are the main pattern of distribution to assess which environments could be mainly influenced by the occurrence of plastic debris. This study presents the record of plastic contamination in sediments samples from three different benthic domains, all related to Norwegian waters including the first observation of microplastic contamination in the Kveithola Trough. Three cores were sampled from the Oslofjord, in locations characterised by almost shallow waters (~100 m); two sediment cores were sampled from deep environments (1320 – 1650 m) in the North-eastern slope of the Greenland Sea close to the Svalbard archipelago; and finally, two from Kveithola, a trough engraved on the margin of the shallow Barents Sea bank (230 – 340 m). Plastic particles were detected in every core analysed using a high-density separation approach (NaI, 1.8 g cm-3). Each plastic particle was described based on its morphology (size, shape, colour) under an optical microscope. Further, the polymeric origin of particles was chemically confirmed using Attenuated Total ... Text Barents Sea Greenland Greenland Sea Svalbard Università di Pisa: ETD (Electronic Theses and Dissertations) Barents Sea Greenland Norway Svalbard Svalbard Archipelago
spellingShingle SCIENZE DELLA TERRA
BRONZO, LAURA
Distributional patterns of microplastics in sediment samples from coastal (Oslofjord, Norway) and deep (North-eastern Greenland Sea slope; Kveithola Trough, Barents Sea) marine environments
title Distributional patterns of microplastics in sediment samples from coastal (Oslofjord, Norway) and deep (North-eastern Greenland Sea slope; Kveithola Trough, Barents Sea) marine environments
title_full Distributional patterns of microplastics in sediment samples from coastal (Oslofjord, Norway) and deep (North-eastern Greenland Sea slope; Kveithola Trough, Barents Sea) marine environments
title_fullStr Distributional patterns of microplastics in sediment samples from coastal (Oslofjord, Norway) and deep (North-eastern Greenland Sea slope; Kveithola Trough, Barents Sea) marine environments
title_full_unstemmed Distributional patterns of microplastics in sediment samples from coastal (Oslofjord, Norway) and deep (North-eastern Greenland Sea slope; Kveithola Trough, Barents Sea) marine environments
title_short Distributional patterns of microplastics in sediment samples from coastal (Oslofjord, Norway) and deep (North-eastern Greenland Sea slope; Kveithola Trough, Barents Sea) marine environments
title_sort distributional patterns of microplastics in sediment samples from coastal (oslofjord, norway) and deep (north-eastern greenland sea slope; kveithola trough, barents sea) marine environments
topic SCIENZE DELLA TERRA
topic_facet SCIENZE DELLA TERRA
url http://etd.adm.unipi.it/theses/available/etd-09022020-102853/