The plastics come in all shapes and sizes: Cylinders and small spheres, polyester and plastic foam, filaments from fishing gears, and various pieces of plastic from varied chemical compositions were collected and analyzed by the researchers. About 2,500 samples were studied. The team then identified the most common microplastic pollutants, namely, polyethylene (54.5 percent), polypropylene (16.5 percent) and polyester (9.7 percent).
The microplastics “are round-shaped, and small – about a millimeter – and light-weighted,” according to first author William de Haan. While previous scientific studies on microplastics in the sea could not prove how long these plastics can stay in the marine ecosystems, Haan and his team may have an answer. The state in which the researchers found the plastics, he added, “suggest[s] a state of advanced deterioration and therefore, a long permanence in the marine environment.” The study found that the peninsular coast has an average of 100,000 microplastics per square kilometer (mp/km2). However, they also identified areas that have as much as 500,000 mp/km2. These results are consistent with similar studies done on other parts in the Mediterranean.Good fish, bad fish: How to avoid contaminants and support sustainably farmed fish
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