Abstract
Marine plastic pollution is a global issue, with microplastics (1 µm-5 mm) dominating the measured plastic count1,2. Although microplastics can be found throughout the oceanic water column3,4, most studies collect microplastics from surface waters (less than about 50-cm depth) using net tows5. Consequently, our understanding of the microplastics distribution across ocean depths is more limited. Here we synthesize depth-profile data from 1,885 stations collected between 2014 and 2024 to provide insights into the distribution and potential transport mechanisms of subsurface (below about 50-cm depth, which is not usually sampled by traditional practices3,6) microplastics throughout the oceanic water column. We find that the abundances of microplastics range from 10-4 to 104 particles per cubic metre. Microplastic size affects their distribution; the abundance of small microplastics (1 µm to 100 µm) decreases gradually with depth, indicating a more even distribution and longer lifespan in the water column compared with larger microplastics (100 µm to 5,000 µm) that tend to concentrate at the stratified layers. Mid-gyre accumulation zones extend into the subsurface ocean but are concentrated in the top 100 m and predominantly consist of larger microplastics. Our analysis suggests that microplastics constitute a measurable fraction of the total particulate organic carbon, increasing from 0.1% at 30 m to 5% at 2,000 m. Although our study establishes a global benchmark, our findings underscore that the lack of standardization creates substantial uncertainties, making it challenging to advance our comprehension of the distribution of microplastics and its impact on the oceanic environment.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | eadl2746 |
Pages (from-to) | 51-61 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | Nature |
Volume | 641 |
Issue number | 8061 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - May 2025 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© The Author(s) 2025.
Funding
We thank E. van Sebille for advice. The following funding sources are acknowledged: L.A.A.-Z. and E.R.Z. acknowledge the financial support from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) in the frame of an NWO Groot project (OCENW.GROOT.2019.043); H.N. acknowledges European Research Council funding (ERC-CoG grant number 772923, project VORTEX); L.Z. and A.S. acknowledge the United States of America National Science Foundation (NSF EAGER OCE 2127669, NSF CBET 1910621); L.Z. acknowledges the China National Science Foundation (NSFC 42206154); M.T. acknowledges the European Union\u2019s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, MINKE project (under grant agreement number 101008724), and Global Challenges Research Fund (NE/V005448/1), project \u2018Reducing the Impacts of Plastic Waste in the Eastern Pacific Ocean\u2019 led by the University of Exeter, UK; R.P.B. acknowledges the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (#9208) and 2018 Star-Friedman grant for promising scientific research.
Funders | Funder number |
---|---|
University of Exeter | |
United States of America National Science Foundation | |
European Research Council | |
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek | OCENW.GROOT.2019.043 |
ERC-CoG | 772923 |
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme | NE/V005448/1, 101008724 |
National Natural Science Foundation of China | 42206154 |
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation | 9208 |
National Science Foundation | OCE 2127669, CBET 1910621 |