Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumMicroplastic- Eating Plankton May Be Worsening Crisis In Oceans, Scientists Say
- Microplastic-eating plankton may be worsening crisis in oceans, say scientists. Rotifers could be accelerating risk by splitting particles into thousands of potentially more dangerous nanoplastics, The Guardian, Nov. 9, 2023. Ed.
A type of zooplankton found in marine and fresh water can ingest and break down microplastics, scientists have discovered. But rather than providing a solution to the threat plastics pose to aquatic life, the tiny creatures known as rotifers could be accelerating the risk by splitting the particles into thousands of smaller and potentially more dangerous nanoplastics.
Each rotifer, named from the Latin for wheel-bearer owing to the whirling wheel of cilia around their mouths, can create between 348,000 and 366,000 nanoplastics particles smaller than one micrometre each day. The animals are microscopic, ubiquitous and abundant, with up to 23,000 individuals found living in one litre of water, in one location.
The researchers, from a team led by the Univ. of Mass. Amherst, calculated that in Poyang Lake, the largest lake in China, rotifers were creating 13.3 quadrillion of these plastic particles every day. Plastic can take up to 500 years to decompose. As it ages, tiny pieces break off. Physical and chemical processes are known to break them down, including when exposed to sunlight or when waves grind bits of plastic against rocks, beaches or other obstacles floating in the ocean.
The scientists sought to examine what role aquatic life might play in microplastic creation, especially after the discovery in 2018 that Antarctic krill are able to break down polyethylene balls into fragments of less than one micrometre. Rotifers have specialised chewing apparatus similar to krill. They wanted to test the hypothesis that rotifers, of which there are 2,000 species worldwide, could also break down plastic.. Microplastics have contaminated every corner of the planet, and they are in many humans blood and heart tissue and the placentas of unborn babies...
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/nov/09/microplastic-eating-plankton-worsening-crisis-oceans-plastic-pollution
Hekate
(94,623 posts)appalachiablue
(42,903 posts)that we've fouled up massively.
ret5hd
(21,320 posts)And that clock may start counting sooner than many expect.
appalachiablue
(42,903 posts)given the extent of damage we've created. Blows the mind.
Hekate
(94,623 posts)Once there was grass where you stand
Once there were songs about rights instead of wrongs
Once was the time of man
They didnt know in the old times
The earth and the seas are to share
They didnt know in the old times
Or care
Funny how that song, simple as it was and as few times as I heard it, just got stuck in my memory forever.
appalachiablue
(42,903 posts)Hekate
(94,623 posts)Thanks for finding it The Limelighters were a great group.
CrispyQ
(38,238 posts)But we view life as a hierarchy with us at the top.