A 75-year history of microplastic fragment accumulation rates in a semi-enclosed hypoxic basin

Sci Total Environ. 2023 Jan 1:854:158751. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.158751. Epub 2022 Sep 13.

Abstract

Plastic budgets in the marine environment and their long-term trends are yet to be fully understood. Measuring the accumulation rates in bottom sediments is crucial to solving the riddle of missing ocean plastics. Previous studies based on coastal sediment cores have found that accumulation rates have increased with increases in plastic production and/or regional populations. However, the correlations between the rates and bioactivities or ocean dynamics, which are crucial for modeling the microplastic sinking process, have not been examined. We revealed a 75-year microplastic fragment (0.3-5.0 mm) accumulation rate history in a hypoxic basin, Beppu Bay, Japan, based on multi-core analysis and 210Pb dating of the sediment which was cross-checked by time control with 137Cs radioactivity peaks. We found that a long-term linear increasing trend with an approximately 20-year variation overlapped with significant peaks around 1990 and 2014 with the first polypropylene microplastic fragment detected from a 1958.8-1961.0 CE sediment layer. The maximum rate was 203 pieces m-2 y-1 with an abundance of 86 pieces kg-1-dry in 2014. Smaller fragments in the size range of 0.3-2.0 mm have been consistently dominant in terms of the accumulation rate throughout the 1955-2015 period, accounting for 85.3 % of the total accumulation rate. The three major polymers (polyethylene, polypropylene, and polystyrene) accounted for 96.6 % of the total rate. The rate was highly and positively correlated with the chlorophyll-a accumulation rate and concentration in the sediment. Based on the microplastic accumulation rates and concentration in the seawater, the mean sinking velocity of microplastics was estimated to be in the order of 101 m d-1. Our results will contribute to significant progress in modeling the microplastic sinking process by offering the first field measurement-based mean sinking velocity and significant correlations between the rate and bioactivity-related signals.

Keywords: Anthropocene; Beppu Bay; Chlorophyll-a; Nutrient supply; Sinking velocity.