Godthåbsfjorden. Foto: Torkel Gissel Nielsen.

First quantification of microplastics off the coast of Nuuk

Tuesday 11 Aug 20
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Helle Falborg

MarinePlastic

MarinePlastic is an interdisciplinary center for research into plastic pollution in the world's oceans. The project brings together Danish researchers across research institutions and research areas.

The center is supported by the VELUX Foundation

Read more on the projects' webpage
https://marineplastic.dk/

A new study shows that concentrations of microscopic plastic particles in the sea along the west coast of Greenland are roughly the same as in the Atlantic Ocean

Tiny-tiny pieces of plastic. Approx. 0.1 mm long. Same size as phytoplankton, the copepods’ favourite food.

Microplastics (MPs) of this size were found by researchers from DTU Aqua, DTU Environment, Aalborg University, and the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources in water sampled from the fjord Nuup Kangerlua (or Godthåbsfjorden), which runs past Nuuk and into the sea west of Greenland.

They found about 1 particle per 10 litres of water, which is similar to the concentrations previously found in seawater elsewhere in the North Atlantic. The researchers had expected to find much higher concentrations because German researchers have measured very high concentrations of MPs in snow and ice on the glaciers melting into Nuup Kangerlua. The results of the study have just been published in the scientific journal Environmental Pollution

“There’s plastic in the fjord. Not as much as we would have expected based on the concentrations found by the Germans in snow and ice. But it’s there. And the plastic particles are generally very small. They are exactly of a size that the copepods in the area can eat, which means they can enter the marine food webs that way, says Professor Torkel Gissel Nielsen, DTU Aqua.

He stresses that the concentrations of plastic currently detected are probably unlikely to have significant adverse effects. But if it gets much worse, we could have a problem.

“We can also see that there are 10,000 times as many phytoplankton in the water as there is plastic. So assuming that the copepods eat whatever they come across and given the abundance of food available to them, they are unlikely to end up ingesting too many plastic particles at all. And so the risk of the MPs entering the marine food webs and being distributed around is infinitely small,” says Torkel Gissel Nielsen.

Pumps caught much smaller particles than nets

The researchers from the VELUX project MarinePlastic collected samples in five places along Nuup Kangerlua. They used specially developed pumps featuring filters capable of collecting the tiniest MPs, but for comparative reasons they also collected samples using traditional Bongo nets, which were shown to collect a thousand times fewer MPs than the pumps. The nets only caught MPs larger than 300 μm. 

“Using pumps like we’ve done in this case, you’ll find far higher concentrations of very small MPs—which is what is most bio-available and potentially able to enter the marine food webs via copepods,” he says. 

Nuuk is a point source of plastic

The research vessel sailed from inside the fjord, where the glacier water runs into the fjord, past Nuuk and out to the mouth of the fjord. In five places along the way, samples were collected, and the highest concentration of MPs was seen around Nuuk and further out towards the sea. Nuuk is Greenland’s largest city with approximately 18,000 inhabitants. The city does not have effective sewage treatment plants.

The most abundant type of plastic was polyester, which is used, for example, in synthetic fabrics and plastic bottles. The second-most abundant type was polyamide or nylon, used for example in fishing nets.

“We also found that MP concentrations were roughly comparable with concentrations previously found in the North Atlantic, about 1 particle per 10 litres of water. And Nuuk was identified as a point source. Compared to the measuring stations further into the fjord, MP abundance—and especially the smallest size fractions of MPs—increased close to Nuuk,” explains Torkel Gissel Nielsen.

Read the article in Environmental Pollution
Quantification of plankton-sized microplastics in a productive coastal Arctic marine ecosystem