Modelling the accumulation and transport of microplastics by sea ice
- Alethea Sara Mountford,
- Miguel Angel Morales Maqueda
Abstract
Plastic pollution is ubiquitous within the marine environment. Despite
increasing public and scientific attention to the issue, there still
remain gaps in the knowledge of the full global extent of the
distribution of this microplastic pollution. The presence and
transportation of microplastics in sea ice is an emerging area of
research, particularly with regards to sea ice in the Southern Ocean.
This study uses numerical modelling to explore the accumulation and
transport of positively and neutrally buoyant microplastics in both
Arctic and Southern Ocean sea ice. In general, sea ice may be an
important seasonal sink for microplastics pollution in both the Arctic
and the Antarctic. Positively buoyant microplastics dominate in Arctic
sea ice, whereas in the Southern Ocean, neutrally buoyant plastics,
which arrive in the region through deep water transport, appear to be
dominant. The overall distribution of microplastics in the Arctic is in
keeping with the current literature, although direct comparisons between
the results of this model and observational data should be made with
caution. There is a clear need for further observational data in the
Southern Ocean to elucidate both the transport mechanisms and
accumulation of microplastics in Southern Ocean sea ice.Feb 2021Published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans volume 126 issue 2. 10.1029/2020JC016826