Liro Maciej, Zielonka Anna, van Emmerik Tim H M
Institute of Nature Conservation, Polish Academy of Sciences, al. Adama Mickiewicza 33, 31-120 Kraków, Poland.
Faculty of Geography and Geology, Institute of Geography and Spatial Management, Jagiellonian University, Gronostajowa 7, 30-387 Kraków, Poland.
Environ Int. 2023 Oct;180:108186. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2023.108186. Epub 2023 Sep 7.
The process of macroplastic (>0.5 cm) fragmentation results in the production of smaller plastic particles, which threaten biota and human health and are difficult to remove from the environment. The global coverage and long retention times of macroplastic waste in fluvial systems (ranging from years to centuries) create long-lasting and widespread potential for its fragmentation and the production of secondary micro- and nanoplastics. However, the pathways and rates of this process are mostly unknown and existing experimental data not fully informative, which constitutes a fundamental knowledge gap in our understanding of macroplastic fate in rivers and the transfer of produced microparticles throughout the environment. Here we present a conceptual framework which identifies two types of riverine macroplastic fragmentation controls: intrinsic (resulting from plastic item properties) and extrinsic (resulting from river characteristics and climate). First, based on the existing literature, we identify the intrinsic properties of macroplastic items that make them particularly prone to fragmentation (e.g., film shape, low polymer resistance, previous weathering). Second, we formulate a conceptual model showing how extrinsic controls can modulate the intensity of macroplastic fragmentation in perennial and intermittent rivers. Using this model, we hypothesize that the inundated parts of perennial river channels-as specific zones exposed to the constant transfer of water and sediments-provide particular conditions that accelerate the physical fragmentation of macroplastics resulting from their mechanical interactions with water, sediments, and riverbeds. The unvegetated areas in the non-inundated parts of perennial river channels provide conditions for biochemical fragmentation via photo-oxidation. In intermittent rivers, the whole channel zone is hypothesized to favor both the physical and biochemical fragmentation of macroplastics, with the dominance of the mechanical type during the periods with water flow. Our conceptualization aims to support future experimental and modelling works quantifying plastic footprint of different macroplastic waste in different types of rivers.
宏观塑料(>0.5厘米)破碎过程会产生更小的塑料颗粒,这些颗粒威胁着生物群和人类健康,且难以从环境中清除。宏观塑料垃圾在河流系统中的全球覆盖范围以及较长的留存时间(从数年到数百年不等),为其破碎以及次生微塑料和纳米塑料的产生创造了持久且广泛的可能性。然而,这一过程的途径和速率大多未知,现有的实验数据也不够充分,这构成了我们在理解河流中宏观塑料归宿以及所产生的微塑料在整个环境中的转移方面的一个基本知识空白。在此,我们提出一个概念框架,该框架确定了两种河流宏观塑料破碎控制类型:内在控制(由塑料制品特性导致)和外在控制(由河流特征和气候导致)。首先,基于现有文献,我们确定了使宏观塑料制品特别容易破碎的内在特性(例如,薄膜形状、低聚合物抗性、先前的风化)。其次,我们构建了一个概念模型,展示外在控制如何调节常年河和间歇性河流中宏观塑料破碎的强度。利用这个模型,我们推测常年河道被淹没的部分——作为暴露于水和沉积物持续转移的特定区域——提供了特殊条件,加速了宏观塑料由于其与水、沉积物和河床的机械相互作用而导致的物理破碎。常年河道未被淹没部分的无植被区域为通过光氧化进行的生化破碎提供了条件。在间歇性河流中,整个河道区域被推测有利于宏观塑料的物理和生化破碎,在水流期间机械破碎类型占主导。我们的概念化旨在支持未来的实验和建模工作,以量化不同类型河流中不同宏观塑料垃圾的塑料足迹。