Microplastics are undermining the ocean’s ability to absorb carbon – Oceanographic

Environmental sea problems by RecondOil, CC BY 2.0, via Flickr.
Environmental sea problems by RecondOil, CC BY 2.0, via Flickr.

Excerpt:
New research suggests microplastics are disrupting the ocean’s natural ability to absorb carbon dioxide by interfering with marine life and carbon cycles, potentially weakening one of Earth’s most important defences against climate change.

As the microplastic pandemic continues to rage across the globe, recent research has revealed this form of plastic pollution is impairing the oceans’ ability to absorb carbon dioxide, a process that scientists deem to be crucial for regulating Earth’s temperature.

These findings are the latest to join a growing body of research documenting the spread of microplastics across the planet. Defined as plastic particles smaller than five millimetres, microplastics are now found in the deepest ocean basins to Arctic ice, freshwater systems, soils, the air we breathe, and even inside the human body.

Long recognised as environmental pollutants that transport toxins and harm ecosystems, their role in climate regulation has, until recently, received comparatively little scrutiny. But that gap has become the focus of a new perspective published in Journal of Hazardous Materials: Plastics, which argues that microplastics are quietly interfering with oceanic carbon cycling at a time of accelerating climate change.

“Climate disruption and plastic pollution are two major environmental challenges that intersect in complex ways. MPs (microplastics) influence biogeochemical processes, disrupt oceanic carbon pumps, and contribute directly to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions,” the study’s authors have written.

They point in particular to the biological carbon pump – the natural process by which phytoplankton absorb carbon dioxide through photosynthesis and transport it to deeper ocean layers via marine food webs. According to the study, microplastics disrupt this mechanism by impairing phytoplankton productivity and zooplankton metabolism.

“In marine ecosystems, microplastics alter the natural carbon sequestration by affecting phytoplankton and zooplankton, which are key agents of carbon cycling. Additionally, the plastisphere, a microbial community colonising microplastics, plays a significant role in GHG (greenhouse gas production) due to its diverse microbial networks,” the study has suggested.

The study’s corresponding author, Dr Ihsanullah Obaidullah, Associate Professor of Integrated Water Processing Technologies at the University of Sharjah, has said the findings reveal a ‘largely hidden dimension’ of plastic pollution.

“While widely recognised as pollutants, our study shows they also interfere with the ocean’s ability to absorb carbon dioxide, a process critical for regulating Earth’s temperature,” he said.

Dr Obaidullah has added that the impacts extend beyond carbon uptake alone, suggesting that microplastics disrupt marine life, weaken the ‘biological carbon pump’, and even release greenhouse gases as they degrade.

“Over time, these changes could lead to ocean warming, acidification, and biodiversity loss, threatening food security and coastal communities worldwide…”

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