Water dynamics can trap lightweight microplastics that otherwise might float
Northwestern University
Microplastics can deposit and linger within riverbeds for as long as seven years before washing into the ocean, a new study has found.
Because
rivers are in near-constant motion, researchers previously assumed lightweight
microplastics quickly flowed through rivers, rarely interacting with riverbed
sediments.
Now,
researchers led by Northwestern University and the University of Birmingham in
England, have found hyporheic exchange -- a process in which surface water
mixes with water in the riverbed -- can trap lightweight microplastics that
otherwise might be expected to float.
The study was published today (Jan. 12) in the journal Science Advances. It marks the first assessment of microplastic accumulation and residence times within freshwater systems, from sources of plastic pollution throughout the entire water stream.
The new model describes dynamical processes that influence
particles, including hyporheic exchange, and focuses on hard-to-measure but
abundant microplastics at 100 micrometers in size and smaller.
"Most of what we know about plastics pollution is from the oceans because it's very visible there," said Northwestern's Aaron Packman, one of the study's senior authors. "Now, we know that small plastic particles, fragments and fibers can be found nearly everywhere. However, we still don't know what happens to the particles discharged from cities and wastewater. Most of the work thus far has been to document where plastic particles can be found and how much is reaching the ocean.
"Our
work shows that a lot of microplastics from urban wastewater end up depositing
near the river's source and take a long time to be transported downstream to
oceans."
Packman
is a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Northwestern's
McCormick School of Engineeringand director of the Northwestern Center for
Water Research. He also is a member of the Program on Plastics, Ecosystems and
Public Healthat the Institute for Sustainability and Energy at Northwestern.
Jennifer Drummond, a research fellow at the University of Birmingham and former
Ph.D. student in Packman's laboratory, is the study's first author.
Modeling
microplastic movement
To
conduct the study, Packman, Drummond and their teams developed a new model to
simulate how individual particles enter freshwater systems, settle and then
later remobilize and redistribute.
The
model is the first to include hyporheic exchange processes, which play a
significant role in retaining microplastics within rivers. Although it is
well-known that the hyporheic exchange process affects how natural organic
particles move and flow through freshwater systems, the process is rarely
considered microplastic accumulation.
"The
retention of microplastics we observed wasn't a surprise because we already
understood this happens with natural organic particles," Packman said.
"The difference is that natural particles biodegrade, whereas a lot of
plastics just accumulate. Because plastics don't degrade, they stay in the
freshwater environment for a long time -- until they are washed out by river
flow."
To
run the model, the researchers used global data on urban wastewater discharges
and river flow conditions.
Trapped
in headwaters
Using
the new model, the researchers found microplastic pollution resides the longest
at the source of a river or stream (known as the "headwaters"). In
headwaters, microplastic particles moved at an average rate of five hours per
kilometer. But during low-flow conditions, this movement slowed to a creep --
taking up to seven years to move just one kilometer. In these areas, organisms
are more likely to ingest microplastics in the water, potentially degrading
ecosystem health.
The
residence time decreased as microplastics moved away from the headwaters,
farther downstream. And residence times were shortest in large creeks.
Now
that this information is available, Packman hopes researchers can better assess
and understand the long-term impacts of microplastic pollution on freshwater
systems.
"These
deposited microplastics cause ecological damage, and the large amount of
deposited particles means that it will take a very long time for all of them to
be washed out of our freshwater ecosystems," he said. "This
information points us to consider whether we need solutions to remove these
plastics to restore freshwater ecosystems."
The
study, "Microplastic accumulation in riverbed sediment via hyporheic
exchange from headwaters to mainstems," was supported by a Royal Society
Newton International Fellowship, Marie Curie Individual Fellowship, the German
Research Foundation, the Leverhulme Trust and the National Science Foundation.