The plastic cycle: Pools and fluxes of plastic litter at the watershed scale

Item

Title

The plastic cycle: Pools and fluxes of plastic litter at the watershed scale

Link

https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/fee.2294

List of Authors

Timothy J Hoellein,Chelsea M. Rochman

Abstract

Research on plastics in global ecosystems is rapidly evolving. Oceans have been the primary focus of studies to date, whereas rivers are generally considered little more than conduits of plastics to marine ecosystems. Within a watershed, however, plastics of all sizes are retained, transformed, and even extracted via freshwater use or litter cleanup. As such, plastic litter in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems is an important but underappreciated component of global plastic pollution. To gain a holistic perspective, we developed a conceptual model that synthesizes all sources, fluxes, and fates for plastics in a watershed, including containment (ie disposed in landfill), non-containment (ie persists as environmental pollution), mineralization, export to oceans, atmospheric interactions, and freshwater extraction. We used this model of the “plastic cycle” to illustrate which components have received the most scientific attention and to reveal overlooked pathways. Our main objective is for this framework to inform future research, offer a new perspective to adapt management across diverse waste governance scenarios, and improve global models of plastic litter.

Date

April 1, 2021

Publication Title

Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment

Publisher

Wiley

Identifier

https://doi.org/10.1002/fee.2294

Bibliographic Citation

Hoellein, T.J., and C. Rochman. 2021. The plastic cycle: Pools and fluxes of plastic litter at the watershed scale. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment: 19(3), 176-183.

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