Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4476437 Marine Pollution Bulletin 2016 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Eleven blue, spherical microbeads were captured by surface trawls in Hong Kong waters•The captured microbeads closely resembled those found in a facial scrub available in local supermarkets.•It is estimated that up to 9.4 billion microbeads are emitted to coastal waters in Hong Kong per day•Actions are needed to minimise microbeads from entering the aquatic environments

Plastic microbeads in personal care products have been identified as a source of marine pollution. Yet, their existence in the environment is rarely reported. During two surface manta trawls in the coastal waters of Hong Kong, eleven blue, spherical microbeads were captured. Their sizes (in diameters) ranged from 0.332 to 1.015 mm. These microbeads possessed similar characteristics in terms of colour, shape and size with those identified and extracted from a facial scrub available in the local market. The FT-IR spectrum of the captured microbeads also matched those from the facial scrub. It was likely that the floating microbeads at the sea surface originated from a facial scrub and they have bypassed or escaped the sewage treatment system in Hong Kong. Timely voluntary or legislative actions are required to prevent more microbeads from entering the aquatic environment.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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