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Sunlight pulps the plastic soup by Staff Writers Texel, Netherlands (SPX) Jan 12, 2023
UV light from the sun slowly breaks down plastics on the ocean's surfaces. Floating microplastic is broken down into ever smaller, invisible nanoplastic particles that spread across the entire water column, but also to compounds that can then be completely broken down by bacteria. This is shown by experiments in the laboratory of the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, NIOZ, on Texel. In the latest issue of Marine Pollution Bulletin, PhD student Annalisa Delre and colleagues calculate that about two percent of visibly floating plastic may disappears from the ocean surface in this way each year. "This may seem small, but year after year, this adds up. Our data show that sunlight could thus have degraded a substantial amount of all the floating plastic that has been littered into the oceans since the 1950s," says Delre.
Missing Plastic Paradox
Artificial sun and sea
Slow degradation Fed into a more complex calculation, accounting for the release of floating plastic to the ocean, beaching and ongoing photodegradation at the ocean surface, the breakdown by sunlight could have transformed a fifth (22%) of all floating plastic that has ever been released to the ocean, mostly to smaller, dissolved particles and compounds. "With these calculations, we put an important piece in the jigsaw of the Missing Plastic Paradox in place," says Helge Niemann, researcher at NIOZ and professor at Utrecht University and one of the supervisors of PhD student Delre.
Effects on marine life In an earlier study with 'real' Wadden Sea water and North Sea water (link!), Niemann and colleagues already showed that a substantial part of the missing plastics floats in the oceans as invisible nanoparticles. "The precise effects of these particles on algae, fish and other life in the oceans are still largely unclear," says Niemann. "With these experiments under UV light, we can explain another part of the plastic paradox. We need to continue investigating the fate of the remaining plastic. Also, we need to investigate what all this micro and nano plastic does to marine life. Even more important", Niemann stresses, "is to stop plastic littering all together, as this thickens the ocean's plastic soup."
Research Report:Plastic photodegradaton under simulated marine concitions.
Gas from faulty heaters kills 17 in Algeria amid cold snap Algiers (AFP) Jan 10, 2023 Seventeen people died in Algeria in several cases of carbon monoxide poisoning overnight, emergency services said Tuesday, as plummeting temperatures push people to use crude heaters emitting dangerous fumes. Nine members of the same family - a couple, their five children and two relatives - were found at their home in the city of Bou Saada, around 250 kilometres (155 miles) south of Algiers, the civil defence agency said on its Facebook page. In the northeastern province of Setif, a couple an ... read more
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