Deep sea sediments of the Arctic Central Basin: A potential sink for microplastics
Journal article, 2019

Deep sea sediments have emerged as a potential sink for microplastics in the marine environment. The discovery of microplastics in various environmental compartments of the Arctic Central Basin (ACB) suggested that these contaminants were potentially being transported to the deep-sea realm of this oceanic basin. For the first time, the present study conducted a preliminary assessment to determine whether microplastics were present in surficial sediments from the ACB. Gravity and piston corers were used to retrieve sediments from depths of 855-4353 m at 11 sites in the ACB during the Arctic Ocean 2016 (AO16) expedition. Surficial sediments from the various cores were subjected to density flotation with sodium tungstate dihydrate solution (Na2WO4 center dot 2H(2)O, density 1.4 g cm(-3)). Potential microplastics were isolated and analysed by Fourier Transform Infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy. Of the surficial samples, 7 of the 11 samples contained synthetic polymers which included polyester (n = 3), polystyrene (n = 2), polyacrylonitrile (n = 1), polypropylene (n = 1), polyvinyl chloride (n = 1) and polyamide (n = 1). Fibres (n = 5) and fragments (n = 4) were recorded in the samples. In order to avoid mis-interpretation, these findings musi be taken in the context that (i) sampling equipment did not guarantee retrieval of undisturbed surficial sediments, (ii) low sample volumes were analysed (similar to 10 g per site), (iii) replicate sediment samples per site was not possible, (iv) no air contamination checks were included during sampling and, (v) particles < 100 mu m were automatically excluded from analysis. While the present study provides preliminary indication that microplastics may be accumulating in the deep-sea realm of the ACB, further work is necessary to assess microplastic abundance, distribution and composition in surficial sediments of the ACB.

Deep Sea

Marine debris

Arctic Ocean

Microplastics

Sediment

Author

La Daana K. Kanhai

University of the West Indies

Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology (GMIT)

Carina Johansson

Stockholm University

J. P. G. L. Frias

Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology (GMIT)

Katarina Gårdfeldt

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Richard C. Thompson

University of Plymouth

Ian O'Connor

Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology (GMIT)

Deep-Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers

0967-0637 (ISSN)

Vol. 145 137-142

Subject Categories

Geochemistry

Oceanography, Hydrology, Water Resources

DOI

10.1016/j.dsr.2019.03.003

More information

Latest update

8/8/2022 9