posted on 2021-04-14, 18:36authored bySajjad Abbasi, Andrew Turner, Mohammad Hoseini, Hoda Amiri
Although
microplastics (MPs) are ubiquitous environmental contaminants,
little is known about their occurrence and behavior in the terrestrial
setting. In this study, MPs have been isolated from soils collected
from various geomorphological features (yardangs, sand dunes, moving
sands, seasonal lakes) of the Kavir and Lut Deserts on the Iranian
plateau. The number of MPs identified in 300 g samples ranged from
zero (not detected) in several yardang tops to 25 on some yardang
hillsides, with an overall average abundance of about 0.02 MP g–1. The majority of MPs were of a fibrous nature with
a size distribution (≤100 μm to ≥1000 μm)
skewed toward the lower end, and analysis of a selection of particles
by μ-Raman spectroscopy showed that polyethylene terephthalate
and Nylon (polyamide) were the principal polymers. Scanning electron
microscopy revealed intense degradation of some particles but limited
weathering of others. With little evidence of meso- and macroplastics
in the deserts, it appears that the majority of MPs are brought into
these environments from distant sources via the wind, with smaller,
seasonal contributions from runoff associated with the adjacent mountains.
It is proposed that some windborne MPs are transported through the
deserts relatively rapidly, while others are subject to internal recycling
and significant photo-oxidation and mechanical weathering.