Urban Biology!
Urban Biology!

Plastic soup, anyone?

Have you ever heard of garbage island, a giant platform of plastic flotsam of human waste floating in the Pacific Ocean? Well, it doesn't exist. While it is true that large pieces of plastic end up in the ocean, the true garbage island can't be seen because it is suspended in the ocean as microplastics. This product of human success not only damages aquatic life out in the ocean, but also threatens our health, here in the city!

Microplastics

So what are these so-called microplastics? They are defined as pieces of plastic smaller than 5 mm. One source of these plastics is coming from industries that use plastics in their processes. Their waste water contains small plastic pellets, the raw material that manufacturers use to melt into their desired products(1). You can see what they look like in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Different shapes of microplastics are shown here. The small spherical ones (mostly white) are plastic pallets used by the plastic industry. Source.


Microplastics wind up in the ocean because they bypass the filtration systems due to their size(1). Another, rather surprising source of microplastics is in the form of microspheres in cosmetic products. Many exfoliators, cleansers and facial scrubs make use of microplastics. These are washed down the drain and into the sewers after usage(2;3). Yet again many filtering systems fail to extract them from the water. However, the largest source of microplastics are in fact macroplastics(1). Since plastics are not biodegradable and cannot be recycled into the building blocks of marine life, they accumulate in the water(4). If the plastics stay afloat, sunlight can degrade them to some extent, by a process called photodegradation, but does not really solve the problem. The plastic is not converted into another compound, but simply broken up into smaller chunks: microplastics(1).

Gyres

But isn't it kind of strange that our urban waste ends up in the middle of the Pacific ocean? It can all be explained by the existence of gyres, giant swirling currents, moving the water in the Pacific in a circular motion, thereby trapping many materials in its enormous whirling masses(1). These gyres cause the plastics to accumulate in one point. They are caused by Earth's rotation, global wind patterns and Earth's landmasses(5). As you can see in figure 2 there are many more gyres that can trap macro- and microplastics.

Figure 2: Ocean gyres all around the world. Giant vortices are created when different gulf streams meet. Source.


Toxic soup

The plastic soup, a more appropriate name than garbage island, has severe effects on many lifeforms on earth. The biggest concern about microplastics is their toxicity. Plastics act as toxin sponges. The smaller the microplastics are, the more surface area is available to adsorb toxins like bisphenol A, phthalates, POPs (persistent organic pollutants) and then some(1;4). They are all molecules that impair animal health in one way or another, through induction of birth defects, reproductive failure or even cancer(1).

Going along the food chain

But why should we worry? I will tell you why: these toxins are bio-accumulators. They cannot be converted into readily assimilable molecules through the action of living organisms(1). Plankton, life forms right at the bottom of the food chain, have been reported to ingest microplastics(6). The particles remain in their bodies, along with the toxins attached to them. When fish eat plankton, they ingest these plastics and toxins as well. As the microplastics climb up the food chain, more and more of these POPs and other toxins accumulate in all kinds of marine life. Eventually, the plastics and their bound toxins end up on our plates(1)!

Plastic beach

As a solution beach clean-ups are proposed, because macroplastics degrade most drastically when fully exposed to sunlight, as is the case on beaches. However, this would be more like damage-control than an actual solution(1). Also, by trying to recycle most of the plastic products, or replacing them with more sustainable alternatives like bioplastics. The best way of course, would be to totally turn around our modern industries, but whether that is feasible is debatable. further damage can be reduced. However, we have to learn to live with the fact that most of the plastic that is suspended in the ocean, will never be degraded and will stay in the ocean forever. So let that sink in for a bit and think of the consequences our urban life has on the Pacific and on us living in our beloved cities...

You might also enjoy:

-Our article on garbage in the city, which partly focusses on plastic waste management.

-A documentary on what you might encounter when you actually enter the North Pacific gyre.

-This website contains a list of products that do use microbeads.

-This website contains a list with companies that have pledged not to use microbeads in their products.