Plastic pollutants circulate in pockets of the Great Lakes at
concentrations higher than any other body of water on Earth, according
to a recent State University of New York study.
The study is the first to look at plastic pollutants in the Great
Lakes. It is part of a larger global endeavor to understand the origin
and prevalence of plastic pollution in water and was conducted with the
Los Angeles-based 5 Gyres Institute.
“We had two samples in Lake Erie that we just kept going back and
rechecking the data, because the count, the number of plastic particles
in the sample, was three times greater than any sample collected
anywhere in the entire world,” SUNY chemistry professor and project lead
Sherri Mason said.
Mason’s team of 20 students embarked this summer aboard the US Brig Niagara,
the rebuilt flagship that won the Battle of Lake Erie during the War of
1812. Beginning in Lake Superior, for three weeks in July the team
sailed south through Lake Huron and into Lake Erie, collecting water
samples as they traveled.
Twenty-one samples were collected with a net trailing from the
vessel. The net’s mesh was a mere 333 micrometres, or 0.013 inch, wide.
They found the least plastic in Lake Superior, with the
concentrations increasing as they sailed south. That’s because water
flows south from Lake Superior through Lake Huron and into lakes Erie
and Ontario. The water carries plastics from one lake to the next,
compounding the concentration each time, Mason said.
That her team found plastic pollution was unsurprising to Mason or
anyone involved with the project. But they were surprised by the volume
of plastic, and even more by the kind of plastic they found.
“The reigning kind of thinking is that plastic moves from the land to
the ocean through rivers and lakes, and that it gets smaller as it goes
through erosion,” Mason said, “We thought we would find bigger pieces
in the lakes than in the ocean, but we didn’t really. The vast majority
of what we found was really, really small.”
Most of what the team found was what Mason refers to as
microplastics, pieces less than 5 millimeters wide. Such fragments are
much smaller than those Mason’s team expected to recover.
Why larger pieces were not more common baffles researchers.
“You don’t find microplastic in the ocean like we did in the lakes,”
Mason said. “Somewhere in between there it disappears, and we want to
know where it’s going.”
Mason and her colleagues think that the microplastics could be
washing up on beaches, or that it may be entering the food chain if
consumed by microorganisms or fish. “There’s this uncertainty right now,
so one of the next things we have to do is get out on a boat and look
at the food chain to see if the plastic shows up,” Mason said.
If plastic gets into the food chain, it presents a serious human
health threat, Mason said. According to her research and those of her
colleagues, many non-plastic pollutants, known as persistent organic
pollutants or POPs, latch onto plastics in the water, which could then
be consumed by aquatic life with a variety of consequences.
“All those chemicals leach from the plastic into the fat of the
fish,” Mason said. “This has both direct ways of harming the fish, such
as lining their intestines and interfering with their ability to absorb
nutrients from food, and indirect ones.
“The fish may not immediately die, but they could remain toxic, and
that’s really scary. If the plastics and chemicals are moving into the
food chain, they’re moving into us.”
The dangers of plastic in the aquatic ecosystem is recognized by both
scientists and the plastics industry. According to the American
Chemistry Council, a national trade association representing a multitude
of chemistry firms, including plastic manufacturers, any human debris
is potentially destructive to the lakes.
“Discarded or littered items, of any material, whether plastic,
paper, steel, or aluminum, doesn’t belong in the marine ecosystem,” said
Allyson Wilson, a council spokesperson. “Litter can absolutely pose a
threat to marine life when animals get entangled, trapped or mistake
plastics for food”
Wilson added, however, that microplastics like those found by Mason
could be less harmful than many fear. “This is an emerging area of
research, and we’re all committed to better understanding microplastic’s
effects on the marine environment,” she said. Some research indicates
that persistent organic pollutants may bond so tightly to the plastic
that they cannot be separated and digested by the fish.
Wilson noted that the Food and Drug Administration requires health
and safety inspections of commercial fish catches, and that the
Environmental Protection Agency regulates drinking water and requires
water treatment facilities to filter particles from the water.
Much further study of plastic in the Great Lakes is necessary before
concerns over it can be dismissed, Mason said. Her study plays into the
larger goals of the 5 Gyres Institute, an environmental group that
studies the causes and impacts of plastic pollution in the oceans,
specifically in the five subtropical gyres. A gyre is a large area of
rotating ocean currents in which plastics accumulate.
Having studied each of the five gyres, the institute is now turning its attention inland toward the source of the pollution.
“Most plastics that end up in the ocean start out on land,” said
Marcus Eriksen, co-founder of 5 Gyres. “This project is us going
upstream from the oceans and trying to trace them back to their
origins.”
Great Lakes pollution has global consequences, Eriksen said.
“The gyres we study account for about 25 percent of the planet’s
surface, and they draw pollution from all over the world, including the
Great Lakes. They’re covered in a thin layer of plastic soup,” he said.
It would be a waste of time and money to try to clean up all the
plastic in the gyres, he said. Identifying and reducing that pollution
at its sources upstream is the only way to reduce it.
That’s why Mason and her team conducted the study this summer. Next
summer, they aim to continue their work by sailing Lake Michigan.
“No amount of plastic in the lakes is acceptable,” Mason said. “The
best cure is to find ways to reduce plastic use. We’re all part of the
problem, and that means we’re all part of the solution. If we change our
consumer habits, we change what’s in the water.”
Skeptics may say that this has been tried hundreds of times by people who couldn’t make it work effectively, which is true.
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