Large Accumulation
of Micro-sized Synthetic Polymer
Particles in the Sea Surface Microlayer
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Abstract
Determining the exact abundance of
microplastics on the sea surface
can be susceptible to the sampling method used. The sea surface microlayer
(SML) can accumulate light plastic particles, but this has not yet
been sampled. The abundance of microplastics in the SML was evaluated
off the southern coast of Korea. The SML sampling method was then
compared to bulk surface water filtering, a hand net (50 μm
mesh), and a Manta trawl net (330 μm mesh). The mean abundances
were in the order of SML water > hand net > bulk water >
Manta trawl
net. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) identified that
alkyds and poly(acrylate/styrene) accounted for 81 and 11%, respectively,
of the total polymer content of the SML samples. These polymers originated
from paints and the fiber-reinforced plastic (FRP) matrix used on
ships. Synthetic polymers from ship coatings should be considered
to be a source of microplastics. Selecting a suitable sampling method
is crucial for evaluating microplastic pollution