Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8871058 | Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2018 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
To address the rising concern over the use of plastic microbeads in personal care and cosmetic products, countries worldwide have started taking legislative actions to ban microbeads. Yet, the degree of contamination of coastal waters by plastic microbeads is rarely reported. Surface manta trawls were conducted to investigate the presence of microbeads in the southern coastal waters of Hong Kong. Considering only the size fraction of 0.3 to 1â¯mm, 60% of samples were found to contain microbeads. Microbeads accounted for 3.6% of the total microplastics collected and microbead abundance ranged from 0 to 380,129â¯pcs/km2. The shapes, sizes, colours, and composition of microbeads found in our samples were similar to those from tested facial scrubs, suggesting that pelagic microbeads collected in this study very likely originated from the cosmetic products available locally. Microbeads represent a non-negligible part of the microplastics found in surface coastal waters.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Oceanography
Authors
Wing Kwan So, Kayi Chan, Christelle Not,