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Nova Scotia

Research finds fishing gear a major source of ocean microplastics in Atlantic Canada

Researchers studying the quantity of microplastics in the ocean in Atlantic Canada say some of the major sources of the puny pieces of plastic come from fishing gear and single-use plastics.

Researcher says microplastics 'end up ubiquitously across the marine environment'

The goal of the study is to provide a first-ever estimate of the quantity of microplastics in the ocean in Atlantic Canada. (Coastal Action)

Two years ago, researchers collected microplastics from pristine surface waters at three nearshore locations in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland,finding tiny and unrecognizable fragments, threads and fibres in every trawl.

Chemical analysis has now identified the synthetic polymers that made up those minisculepieces of plastic andconfirmed what was expected:the microplastics were shed from easily recognized sources.

"Fishing gear, fishing rope, fragments of nets and particles that would come from that kind of activity, that is a big source of microplastics," said Ariel Smith, the coastal and marine team lead for Coastal Action, theenvironmental group that is leading a three-year Atlantic Canadianmicroplastics research project.

The microplastics also come from common single-useitems that people use every day, Smithsaid, as well as fragments from things like packaging.

"It's really important that we think of microplastics in the larger context. These microplastics don't just end up there. They didn't start as these tiny things that are less than fivemillimetres in size," she said.

The microplastics were shed from easily recognized sources, like fishing gear, fishing rope and fragments of nets. (Coastal Action)

The three-year study is funded with a $218,000 grant from Environment and Climate Change Canada. The goal is to provide a first-ever estimate of the quantity of microplastics in the ocean in Atlantic Canada.

Surface water samples were collected in Nova Scotia from the mouth of Lunenburg harbour, the LaHaveRiver Estuary andthe Annapolis Basin.They were also gathered from the Bay of Islands and Humber Arm in western Newfoundland.

The analysis found more than 20 different chemical bonds in the samples.Other findings included:

  • Annapolis Basin sampling sites were 15 per centpolypropylene (rope, packaging, containers), 15per cent polyethylene (bags, cups, bottles) and 10per cent polyethylene/terephthalate (plastic bottles, polyester).
  • Lunenburg County sampling sites were 16 per cent polyethylene,15per cent polypropyleneand 13per cent polystyrene (Styrofoam).
  • Humber Arm, N.L., sampling sites were 30 per cent polypropylene, 11per cent polyethylene and eight per cent polyamide (nylon).

The study also included sampling for microplastics in beach sediment at all locations, but achemical analysis has not been released on those samples.

'Even more than we thought we'd find,' says researcher

A recent update on the project notes microplastics are ingested throughout the food chain and can have both physical and chemical impacts onaquatic life.

Smith said she expected to see microplastics, but not on every trawl.

"It definitely was even more so than we thought we would find ... they end up ubiquitously across the marine environment," she said.

A coalition of industry, government and NGOs called the Fishing Gear Coalition of Atlantic Canada has 20 projects underway to address lost gear, from testing ropeless traps to retrieval operations.

The government of Nova Scotia acknowledges the microplastics problem, calling it "a growing global concern for all marine environments, and plastics used in fishing gear is one of a myriad of sources, as the study has noted."

Dan Davis, with the Nova Scotia Department ofFisheries and Aquaculture, saidin an email the provincial government is taking steps to remove marine debris before it can break down in the environment.

"The province is a partner with other provinces and the federal government on a zero plastic waste strategy, which looks holistically at ways to reduce single use plastics and microplastics in the environment," he said.

"The province recognizes the importance of clean ocean waters and, through its new marine debris cleanup program, supports the fish and seafood industry to work in partnership with others to do beach and ocean cleanups."

Read Coastal Action's report:

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