09:00 - 10:00 |
Margaret Byron: he influence of shape, size, and density distribution on microplastic transport in environmental flows ↓ Foundational experimental and numerical investigations of particles in turbulence are somewhat weighted towards the consideration of small spheres. However, the focus of recent work has shifted towards particle characteristics much more relevant to the transport of microplastics: irregular shapes, a broader range of densities, and sizes much larger than the smallest flow scales. It is not clear, however, how these characteristics might interact to influence important properties like settling velocities, turbulent slip velocity, and bulk transport. For example, small heavy particles and large light particles are both inertial and may even have the same Stokes number, but behave very differently in turbulence. Microplastics, with their wide range of shapes, sizes, and densities, present challenging questions to those seeking to simplify the physics of transport. What parameters matter, and to what degree? A fragment and a fiber have different settling velocities, even if they have the same density; is this difference significant enough to feed into larger-scale transport models? How does settling velocity change in turbulence, and how does this alteration vary across different environments, each with their own flow characteristics? The issue becomes even more complex when we consider that microplastics are not static, but dynamic participants in the ecosystem around them. They deform, degrade, and are colonized by the surrounding biota, leaving behind particles and aggregates which may be highly non-uniform in shape and mass distribution. How does this change their overall transport? While we will not attempt to answer all of these questions, we will discuss how size and shape may amplify the effects of very small density changes, such as those which may result from marginal degradation or colonization of microplastics. We will also present recent work on how non-uniform mass distributions can affect the behavior of large nonspherical particles. Lastly, we will outline our current efforts to more deeply quantify the role of irregular mass/density distributions on the overall transport of microplastics in environmental flows. (Online) |
10:10 - 10:50 |
Kai Ziervogel: Interactions between marine microbes and microplastics ↓ Plastic pollution in the ocean has been recognized as one of the largest environmental tragedies of our time. Ecosystem responses to plastic waste in the sea are often focused on megafauna. Comparatively less is known about interactions between plastic waste and marine microbes, including bacteria, microalgae, and fungi. Microbes have been found to utilizing fractions of microplastics (MPs) as a carbon source and surfaces to grow on. MPs may also get incorporated into microbial aggregates, acting as precursors for rapidly sinking, macroscopic aggregates (marine snow) that accelerate the vertical downward carbon flux in the ocean. We conducted laboratory experiments to investigate how growth and aggregation of planktonic microalgae are affected by the presence of MPs. Cell growth and aggregation efficiencies were measured in two separate incubations with a phytoplankton monoculture (Isochrysis sp.) and a mixed culture (Isochrysis sp. + Skeletonema sp.) in the presence of postconsumer high-density polyethylene MPs. Most notable effects were found for the mixed culture that showed higher cell growth and aggregation efficiencies in the presence of MPs compared to the non-MPs controls. The monoculture and mixed culture did not incorporate MPs into marine snow, while cells from another phytoplankton monoculture (Emiliana huxleyi) formed marine snow with MPs. Sinking rates of marine plastic snow (MaPS) in an unstratified water column were similar those of marine snow and about double those of MPs alone. Transition times of marine snow and MaPS through a stratified water column mimicking stratification in estuarine and open ocean environments were also very similar, and almost 50 times slower than denser nylon particles of the same diameter. Thus, MPs that made up about 50% of the total area of the aggregates did not measurably affect the settling behavior of marine snow under our controlled laboratory conditions. Our results suggest that both aggregate types possess similar (elevated) residence times in surface waters where they may be subject to grazing particularly at sharp density layers, representing a pathway of MPs into higher trophic levels in the ocean interior. (Online) |