Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




FROTH AND BUBBLE
Microplastic pollution prevalent in lakes too
by Staff Writers
Lausanne, Switzerland (SPX) May 30, 2013


The study is one of the first of its kind to focus on a continental freshwater lake.

EPFL researchers have detected microplastic pollution in one of Western Europe's largest lakes, Lake Geneva, in large enough quantities to raise concern. While studies in the ocean have shown that these small bits of plastic can be harmful to fish and birds that feed on plankton or other small waterborne organisms, the full extent of their consequences in lakes and rivers is only now being investigated.

The study, which is being extending under a mandate by the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment, was published in the latest issue of the journal Archives des Sciences.

"We were surprised to find such high concentrations of microplastics, especially in an environmentally aware country like Switzerland," says first author Florian Faure from EPFL.

Faure's study focused on Lake Geneva, where both beaches and lake water were shown to contain significant amounts of microplastic contamination - pieces of plastic waste up to 5 mm in diameter.

The study is one of the first of its kind to focus on a continental freshwater lake. And according to Faure, given the massive efforts put into protecting the lakes shores over the past decades, both on its French and the Swiss shores, the situation is likely to be representative of fresh water bodies around the world.

Microplastics in continental waters may be the main source of microplastic pollution in oceans, where huge hotspots containing high concentrations of these pollutants have formed.

Scientists estimate that only around 20 percent of oceanic microplastics are dumped straight into the sea. The remaining 80 percent are estimated to originate from terrestrial sources, such as waste dumps, street litter, and sewage.

Microplastic pollution is also a strain to lake and river ecosystems, threatening the animals that inhabit these aquatic ecosystems both physically and chemically. When inadvertently swallowed by aquatic birds and fish, the tiny bits of plastic can wind up stuck in the animals' intestines, where they obstruct their digestive tracts, or cause them to suffocate by blocking their airways.

Ingested plastics may also leach toxic additives and other pollutants stuck to their surface into the animals that swallow them, such as bisphenol A (BPA) and phthalates, two carcinogenic agents used in transparent plastics, or other hydrophobic water pollutants, such as PCBs.

Like counting needles in a haystack
Florian Faure and his collaborators used a variety of approaches to quantify plastic and microplastic pollution in and around the lake, from combing beaches along Lake Geneva for plastic litter to dissecting animals, fishes (pikes, roaches and breams) and birds from the aquatic environment, and observing bird droppings around the lake.

To measure the concentration of microplastics in the water, Faure worked in collaboration with Oceaneye, a Geneva-based non-profit organization. Using an approach developed to study plastic pollution in the Mediterranean Sea, they pulled a manta trawl - a floating thin-meshed net - behind a boat in Lake Geneva to pick up any solid matter in the top layer of the water. The samples were then sorted out, dried and the solid compounds were analyzed for their composition.

"We found plastic in every sample we took from the beaches," says Faure. Polystyrene beads were the most common culprits, but hard plastics, plastic membranes, and bits of fishing line were also widespread. In this preliminary study, the amount of debris caught in Lake Geneva using the manta trawl was comparable to measurements made in the Mediterranean Sea.

The scientists are now extending their focus to lakes and rivers across the country, backed by a mandate from the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment.

According to the lab's director, Luiz Felippe de Alencastro, this will involve studying microplastic pollution in lakes, rivers, and biota across the country, as well as the associated micropollutants, such as PCBs, which have already been found stuck on microplastics from Lake Geneva in significant concentrations.

.


Related Links
Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FROTH AND BUBBLE
Fresh oil spill from Turkish tanker off Cape Town
Johannesburg (AFP) May 29, 2013
Fresh oil has begun pouring from a Turkish tanker that ran aground four years ago off the coast of Cape Town, South Africa's premier tourist destination, an official said on Wednesday. An attempted controlled explosion damaged the vessel during clean-up operations, city disaster management spokesman Wilfred Solomons-Johannes said. One of the tanks ruptured in the explosion "releasing oil ... read more


FROTH AND BUBBLE
NASA, Researchers Use Weightlessness of Space to Design Better Materials for Earth

Helicopter-light-beams - a new tool for quantum optics

Just how secure is quantum cryptography

One Year Anniversary of KOMPSAT-3 Launch

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Mutualink Platform to be Deployed by US DoD during JUICE 2013

General Dynamics to Deliver U.S. Army's Newest Tactical Ground Station Intelligence System

Boeing-built WGS-5 Satellite Enhances Tactical Communications for Warfighters

US Navy And Lockheed Martin Deliver Secure Communications Satellite For Mobile Users

FROTH AND BUBBLE
First Light Angara Rocket Ready for Launch

Russia to launch 12 Proton-M rockets in 2013

Russian Spacecraft Manufacturer to Make Four Launches in 2014

Electric Propulsion

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Orbcomm And Cartrack Deliver Telematics Solution For African Market

Narayansami Inaugurates ISRO Navigation Centre

Advanced aircraft detection to prevent 'friendly fire' mishaps

GPS solution provides three-minute tsunami alerts

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Slow progress on Unasur plans for a joint trainer aircraf

EADS sweetens KF-X offering

NASA's BARREL Mission Launches 20 Balloons

US F-15 crashes in Japan, pilot ejects safely

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Milwaukee-York researchers forward quest for quantum computing

New Technique May Open Up an Era of Atomic-scale Semiconductor Devices

Bright Future For Photonic Quantum Computers

New magnetic graphene may revolutionize electronics

FROTH AND BUBBLE
NASA Ships Sensors for Seafaring Satellite to France

NASA's Landsat Satellite Looks for a Cloud-Free View

Google team captures Galapagos Island beauty for maps

NASA Helps Pinpoint Glaciers' Role in Sea Level Rise

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Microplastic pollution prevalent in lakes too

Fresh oil spill from Turkish tanker off Cape Town

Poland dumps old garbage system for greener setup

Wal-Mart fined $110 mn over hazardous waste




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement