Microplastic fibres found in groundwater

Microplastic fibres found in groundwater
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Highlights

Microplastics are already known to contaminate the worlds surface waters, yet scientists have only just begun to explore their presence in groundwater systems

Scientists have found microplastics contaminating a groundwater source that accounts for 25% of the global drinking water supply.

Microplastics are already known to contaminate the world’s surface waters, yet scientists have only just begun to explore their presence in groundwater systems.

Fractured limestone aquifers are a groundwater source that accounts for 25% of the global drinking water supply.

The study, published in the journal Groundwater, identified microplastic fibres, along with a variety of medicines and household contaminants, in two aquifer systems in the U.S.

“Plastic in the environment breaks down into microscopic particles that can end up in the guts and gills of marine life, exposing the animals to chemicals in the plastic,” said John Scott, a researcher at the Illinois Sustainable Technology Center in the U.S.

“As the plastics break down, they act like sponges that soak up contaminants and microbes and can ultimately work their way into our food supply,” said Mr. Scott.

Groundwater flows through the cracks and voids in limestone, sometimes carrying sewage and runoff from roads, landfills and agricultural areas into the aquifers below, he said.

The researchers collected 17 groundwater samples from wells and springs — 11 from a highly fractured limestone aquifer near the St Louis metropolitan area and six from an aquifer containing much smaller fractures in rural northwestern Illinois.

All but one of the 17 samples contained microplastic particles, with a maximum concentration of 15.2 particles per litre from a spring in the St Louis area, researchers said.

However, deciphering what that concentration means is a challenge, Scott said. There are no published risk assessment studies or regulations.

“The research on this topic is at a very early stage, so I am not convinced we have a frame of reference to state expectations or bounds on what is considered low or high levels,” said Tim Hoellein, a professor at Loyola University Chicago.

The researchers identified a variety of household and personal health contaminants along with the microplastics, a hint that the fibres may have originated from household septic systems.

“Even if we quit plastics cold turkey today, we will still deal with this issue for years because plastic never really goes away,” Mr. Scott said.

“It is estimated that 6.3 billion metric tonnes of plastic waste have been produced since the 1940s, and 79% of that is now in landfills or the natural environment,” he said.

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