Abstract

An estimated 8.3 billion tonnes of non-biodegradable plastic has been produced over the last 65 years. Much of this is not recycled or disposed of ‘properly’, has a long environmental residence time and accumulates in sedimentary systems worldwide, posing a threat to important ecosystems and potentially human health. We synthesise existing knowledge of seafloor microplastic distribution, and integrate this with process-based sedimentological models of particle transport, to provide new insights, and critically, to identify future research challenges. Compilation of published data shows that microplastics pervade the global seafloor, from abyssal plains to submarine canyons and deep-sea trenches. However, few studies relate microplastic accumulation to sediment transport and deposition. Microplastics may enter directly into the sea as marine litter from shipping and fishing, or indirectly via fluvial and aeolian systems from terrestrial environments. The nature of the entry-point is critical to how terrestrially-sourced microplastics are transferred to offshore sedimentary systems. We present models for physiographic shelf connection types related to the tectono-sedimentary regime of the margin. Beyond the shelf, the principal agents for microplastic transport are: i) gravity-driven transport in sediment-laden flows; ii) settling, or conveyance through biological processes, of material that was formerly floating on the surface or suspended in the water column; iii) transport by thermohaline currents, either during settling or by reworking of deposited microplastics. We compare microplastic settling velocities to natural sediments to understand how appropriate existing sediment transport models are for explaining microplastic dispersal. Based on this analysis, and the relatively well-known behaviour or deep-marine flow types, we explore the expected distribution of microplastic particles, both in individual sedimentary event deposits and within deep-marine depositional systems. Residence time within certain deposit types and depositional environments is anticipated to be variable, which has implications for the likelihood of ingestion and incorporation into the food chain, further transport, or deeper burial. We conclude that integration of process-based sedimentological and stratigraphic knowledge with insights from modern sedimentary systems, and biological activity within them, will provide essential constraints on the transfer of microplastics to deep-marine environments, their distribution and ultimate fate, and the implications that these have for benthic ecosystems.

Highlights

  • WHAT ARE MICROPLASTICS AND WHY DO WE CARE?Plastic is an incredibly versatile and inexpensive material, which is ubiquitous in modern life

  • (6) What is likely to be the ultimate fate of microplastics? We explore the implications of deep-sea sediment transport that may initially result in preservation of microplasticbearing deposits over short timescales, but over longer time-scales may be subject to repeated re-exhumation and remobilization

  • The study of microplastics in deep-marine environments is in its infancy

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Plastic is an incredibly versatile and inexpensive material, which is ubiquitous in modern life. Microplastics were documented as early as 1972 on the surface of the Sargasso Sea (Carpenter et al, 1972); concern for the potential consequences for ocean life has only recently been raised These small and light plastic particles are readily available to many organisms throughout the marine foodweb. Our knowledge of the locations of microplastic accumulation in the marine realm is presently incomplete, and in particular the distribution on the seafloor is poorly constrained (Thompson et al, 2004; Barnes et al, 2009; Ballent et al, 2013; Woodall et al, 2014; Martin et al, 2017) This is significant as it is estimated that approximately half of all plastics have a density greater than seawater (United States Environmental Protection Agency [USEPA], 1992; Morét-Ferguson et al, 2010). The present lack of characterization and quantification of the processes that control the influx, distribution, and ultimate burial of microplastics in the oceans, provides an opportunity for the application of process-based sedimentology to assess this globally significant issue (Hodgson et al, 2018a)

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