Abstract

This formal comment is in response to “Abundance and distribution of microplastics within surface sediments of a key shellfish growing region of Canada” written by Kazmiruk and colleagues in 2018. This article presents microplastics concentrations in sediment, primarily microbeads, within Baynes Sound, British Columbia, which are some of the highest that have been reported anywhere in the world. The authors cite the local shellfish industry as the likely source of this high degree of contamination and present the industry as a substantial risk to the environment. However, the authors do not sufficiently justify the efficacy of their methodology, and there are several flaws which call into question the legitimacy of their findings. In this commentary, we address the microplastic abundances reported by the authors, and methodological concerns. Furthermore, we provide additional data to elucidate some of this study’s more contentious findings. Specifically, we seek to clarify the visual identification of microbeads and microfibres, and the microplastic concentration within shellfish populations, water, and sediment, within the Baynes Sound shellfish growing region.

Highlights

  • In their paper, Kazmiruk et al [1] state that up to 25,000 microplastic particles, primarily microbeads less than 0.65 μm in diameter, occur per kg of dry sediment in Baynes Sound, the premier shellfish growing region in British Columbia (BC), Canada

  • The authors present several extraordinary and unsubstantiated findings and employ methodologies that call into question the validity of their microplastic concentration estimates

  • In this commentary we address the methodological errors, and the estimation of microplastic abundance

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Summary

FORMAL COMMENT

OPEN ACCESS Citation: Covernton GA, Cox K (2019) Commentary on: Abundance and distribution of microplastics within surface sediments of a key shellfish growing region of Canada. Editor: Vanesa Magar, Centro de Investigacion Cientifica y de Educacion Superior de Ensenada Division de Fisica Aplicada, MEXICO

Introduction
Methodological errors
Estimation of microplastic abundances
Findings
Author Contributions
Full Text
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