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The missing ocean plastic sink: Gone with the rivers.

Lisa WeissWolfgang LudwigSerge HeussnerMiquel CanalsJean François GhiglioneClaude EstournelMel ConstantPhilippe Kerhervé
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2021)
Plastic floating at the ocean surface, estimated at tens to hundreds of thousands of metric tons, represents only a small fraction of the estimated several million metric tons annually discharged by rivers. Such an imbalance promoted the search for a missing plastic sink that could explain the rapid removal of river-sourced plastics from the ocean surface. On the basis of an in-depth statistical reanalysis of updated data on microplastics-a size fraction for which both ocean and river sampling rely on equal techniques-we demonstrate that current river flux assessments are overestimated by two to three orders of magnitude. Accordingly, the average residence time of microplastics at the ocean surface rises from a few days to several years, strongly reducing the theoretical need for a missing sink.
Keyphrases
  • water quality
  • electronic health record
  • risk assessment
  • sensitive detection