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FROTH AND BUBBLE
Global models offer new insights into Great Lakes mercury pollution
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Jan 23, 2018


Trawl suggests Red Sea has relatively low levels of plastic debris
Washington (UPI) Jan 8, 2018 - A recent trawl of the Red Sea turned up surprisingly small amounts of plastic debris.

Globally, the growing prevalence of plastic pollution in the ocean is a serious problem. The latest findings by researchers at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia suggest the problem is less pronounced in the Red Sea.

While not as bad there, researchers say it's still likely some of plastic making its way into the Red Sea is becoming captured by mangrove forests and coral reefs.

"Usually the main source of plastic in the sea tends to be litter and mismanaged waste," KAUST doctoral student Cecilia Martin said in a news release. "But on this coastline, the only large human settlement is Jeddah, with a population of 2.8 million people, and little tourism, so there are few people with the opportunity to litter."

KAUST researchers used plankton nets to trawl for plastic debris at 120 coastal sampling sites along the eastern margins of the Red Sea. The collected plastic fragments were sorted by size and type.

Nearly three-quarters of all collected debris consisted of fragments from broken plastic objects. Plastic bags and wrapping accounted for 17 percent of the pollution. Fishing lines or nets made up 6 percent of the collected plastic, while foam accounted for 4 percent.

Globally, rivers carry significant amounts of plastic to the ocean, but the Red Sea isn't fed by any permanent rivers. Scientists suggest winds account for most of the pollution.

"The winds and a few storms are most probably the main sources of plastic," Martin said. "This is reflected in our findings of proportionally higher amounts of plastic films compared to global trends."

The findings -- published in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science -- aren't all positive. It's likely some plastic has gone missing in the Red Sea, likely captured by mangroves and coral reefs.

The missing plastic could be damaging fragile ecosystems.

"Mangroves are perfect traps for macrolitter," said Martin. "At high tide, floating items reach the forest and then, as the tide drops, get stuck in seedlings and mangrove aerial roots, pneumatophores, which act as a mesh to trap them."

Previous studies have shown a variety of marine organisms ingest plastics, including corals, mollusks, crabs and plankton.

Members of the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community living on Michigan's Upper Peninsula have a fairly simple question: when is it safe to eat the fish they catch?

To help fish-eaters better estimate their risk of exposure, researchers at Michigan Technological University have developed a model designed to measure the impact of local mitigation efforts, socioeconomic pressures, ecological systems, climate change, land use and other variables on local levels of mercury.

Mercury is an atmosphere-surface exchangeable pollutant, a group of invisible, tasteless contaminants that move efficiently throughout the natural environment.

"We're taking phenomena that act on a global scale and predicting what they will do," Judith Perlinger, professor of environmental engineering at Michigan Tech, said in a news release.

Perlinger said working with members of the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community was an integral part of the work.

"Clearly the issue matters to them, so how can we make the science relevant to them?" she said.

To find out, a team of scientists -- 36 researchers from six different institutions -- adapted a global 3D Eulerian chemical transport model to simulate the movement of mercury from the atmosphere into local marine food chains. Researchers used the model to measure how three different regulator policies would impact the flow of mercury in and around Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

In the first simulation, scientists looked at what mercury exposure would look like if all anthropogenic sources in the region were eliminated. A second simulation measured the impact of a more moderate mercury reduction through local mitigation polices. A third imagined a scenario with minimal regulatory efforts.

Unfortunately, the model failed to provide good news. The findings showed all three scenarios yield elevated mercury levels. For those living in Keweenaw Bay, mercury levels are likely to remain dangerously high for the rest of their lifetimes.

Even if man-made mercury inputs are reduced, researchers determined, the contaminants will continue to be transferred from deposits on the land to the fresh water systems where they're absorbed by fish.

"People assume that what is deposited in a forest is also deposited the same in a lake, which isn't true, so models have been miscalculating," said Noel Urban, a professor of environmental engineering.

The slow feedback between land and water means has caused scientists to previously underestimate the role land-based contaminants can play in future pollution levels.

"This is apparent in the Great Lakes, and the Upper Peninsula is a particularly sensitive landscape to mercury," Urban said.

The new research was published this week in the journal Environmental Science.

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Hong Kong engulfed in smog as fears grow over air
Hong Kong (AFP) Jan 22, 2018
Hong Kong's famous skyline was engulfed in smog Monday, with residents urged to stay indoors. The winter months regularly bring worse air quality to Hong Kong and other parts of the region due to wind direction and weather conditions. But as acrid air shrouded the city's skyscrapers, harbour and surrounding hills, residents said they were afraid for their health. "It feels stuffy an ... read more

Related Links
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up


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