Microplastics in Antarctica - A plastic legacy in the Antarctic snow?
Kirstie Jones-Williams, Emily Rowlands, Sebastian Primpke, Tamara S. Galloway, Matthew Cole, Claire M. Waluda, Clara Manno
Abstract
Microplastic pollution in remote inland Antarctica is largely unknown. This study explored the plastic footprint of snow from remote Antarctic camps: Union Glacier, Schanz Glacier and the South Pole. Refined automated FTIR techniques enabled interrogation of microplastics (including fibres) to a lower detection limit of 11 μm in Antarctic snow for the first time. Microplastics were pervasive (73–3099 MP L −1 ). The majority (95 %) measured <50 μm, indicating that previous microplastic reports in Antarctica may be underestimated, due to analytical restrictions. Plastic polymer composition and concentration did not vary significantly between sites, with dominant polymers being polyamide (PA), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polyethylene (PE) and synthetic rubber. Results indicate that even in the earth's most remote regions, humans are leaving a plastic legacy in the snow, illustrating the importance of remote, cryospheric regions as critical study sites for determining temporal fluxes in microplastic pollution. • Small MPs >11 μm were explored in Antarctic snow for the first time. • 95 % of MPs were <50 μm, Antarctic MP may be a greater concern than previously thought. • Polyamide dominated across sites, making up 78 % of the sample at Schanz Glacier. • Anthropogenic activities are leaving an MP legacy in Antarctic snow. • Results show global plastic pollution mitigation strategies are essential.