Role of Microplastics as Anthropogenic Pollutants of Global Ecosystems

abstract: Plastic pollution has become a global threat to ecosystems worldwide, with microplastics now representing contaminants reported to occur in ambient air, fresh water, seawater, soils, fauna and people. Over time, larger macro-plastics are subject to weathering and fragmentation, resulting i...

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Other Authors: Rolsky, Charles (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62690
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-626902020-12-09T05:00:38Z Role of Microplastics as Anthropogenic Pollutants of Global Ecosystems abstract: Plastic pollution has become a global threat to ecosystems worldwide, with microplastics now representing contaminants reported to occur in ambient air, fresh water, seawater, soils, fauna and people. Over time, larger macro-plastics are subject to weathering and fragmentation, resulting in smaller particles, termed ‘microplastics’ (measuring < 5 mm in diameter), which have been found to pollute virtually every marine and terrestrial ecosystem on the planet. This thesis explored the transfer of plastic pollutants from consumer products into the built water environment and ultimately into global aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. A literature review demonstrated that municipal sewage sludge produced by wastewater treatment plants around the world contains detectable quantities of microplastics. Application of sewage sludge on land was shown to represent a mechanism for transfer of microplastics from wastewater into terrestrial environments, with some countries reporting as high as 113 ± 57 microplastic particles per gram of dry sludge. To address the notable shortcoming of inconsistent reporting practices for microplastic pollution, this thesis introduced a novel, online calculator that converts the number of plastic particles into the unambiguous metric of mass, thereby making global studies on microplastic pollution directly comparable. This thesis concludes with an investigation of a previously unexplored and more personal source of plastic pollution, namely the disposal of single-use contact lenses and an assessment of the magnitude of this emerging source of environmental pollution. Using an online survey aimed at quantifying trends with the disposal of lenses in the US, it was discovered that 20 ± 0.8% of contact lens wearers flushed their used lenses down the drain, amounting to 44,000 ± 1,700 kg y-1 of lens dry mass discharged into US wastewater. From the results it is concluded that conventional and medical microplastics represent a significant global source of pollution and a long-term threat to ecosystems around the world. Recommendations are provided on how to limit the entry of medical microplastics into the built water environment to limit damage to ecosystems worldwide. Dissertation/Thesis Rolsky, Charles (Author) Halden, Rolf (Advisor) Green, Matthew (Committee member) Neuer, Susanne (Committee member) Polidoro, Beth (Committee member) Smith, Andrew (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Biology Environmental engineering Citizen science Conservation Marine conservation Plastic pollution Wastewater eng 103 pages Doctoral Dissertation Biology 2020 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62690 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Biology
Environmental engineering
Citizen science
Conservation
Marine conservation
Plastic pollution
Wastewater
spellingShingle Biology
Environmental engineering
Citizen science
Conservation
Marine conservation
Plastic pollution
Wastewater
Role of Microplastics as Anthropogenic Pollutants of Global Ecosystems
description abstract: Plastic pollution has become a global threat to ecosystems worldwide, with microplastics now representing contaminants reported to occur in ambient air, fresh water, seawater, soils, fauna and people. Over time, larger macro-plastics are subject to weathering and fragmentation, resulting in smaller particles, termed ‘microplastics’ (measuring < 5 mm in diameter), which have been found to pollute virtually every marine and terrestrial ecosystem on the planet. This thesis explored the transfer of plastic pollutants from consumer products into the built water environment and ultimately into global aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. A literature review demonstrated that municipal sewage sludge produced by wastewater treatment plants around the world contains detectable quantities of microplastics. Application of sewage sludge on land was shown to represent a mechanism for transfer of microplastics from wastewater into terrestrial environments, with some countries reporting as high as 113 ± 57 microplastic particles per gram of dry sludge. To address the notable shortcoming of inconsistent reporting practices for microplastic pollution, this thesis introduced a novel, online calculator that converts the number of plastic particles into the unambiguous metric of mass, thereby making global studies on microplastic pollution directly comparable. This thesis concludes with an investigation of a previously unexplored and more personal source of plastic pollution, namely the disposal of single-use contact lenses and an assessment of the magnitude of this emerging source of environmental pollution. Using an online survey aimed at quantifying trends with the disposal of lenses in the US, it was discovered that 20 ± 0.8% of contact lens wearers flushed their used lenses down the drain, amounting to 44,000 ± 1,700 kg y-1 of lens dry mass discharged into US wastewater. From the results it is concluded that conventional and medical microplastics represent a significant global source of pollution and a long-term threat to ecosystems around the world. Recommendations are provided on how to limit the entry of medical microplastics into the built water environment to limit damage to ecosystems worldwide. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Biology 2020
author2 Rolsky, Charles (Author)
author_facet Rolsky, Charles (Author)
title Role of Microplastics as Anthropogenic Pollutants of Global Ecosystems
title_short Role of Microplastics as Anthropogenic Pollutants of Global Ecosystems
title_full Role of Microplastics as Anthropogenic Pollutants of Global Ecosystems
title_fullStr Role of Microplastics as Anthropogenic Pollutants of Global Ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Role of Microplastics as Anthropogenic Pollutants of Global Ecosystems
title_sort role of microplastics as anthropogenic pollutants of global ecosystems
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62690
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