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What are microplastics?

Microplastics are small pieces of plastic less than 5 millimeters long. Some microplastics start out small, like industrial plastic pellets used to make plastic products, or microbeads added to exfoliating personal care products like cleansers and toothpaste [1]. Other microplastics result from large pieces of plastic breaking down. Tumbling around in water or on land, exposure to sunlight, and interactions with living things can break down plastic materials into smaller microplastics [2]. Small fragments of plastic water bottles, fibers from fleece clothing, frayed pieces of nylon rope—these can all be microplastics. They never go away, they just get smaller and smaller.

Microplastics are made of materials called polymers, and these polymers commonly come from refined oil and gas. Especially prevalent as pollution in the environment are polyethylene, polypropylene, and polystyrene.

How can microplastics pollution affect our communities?

You might have already heard that microplastics are a problem. They’re polluting our oceans and our coasts, but they’re also in rivers and city canals, in drinking water, and in our seafood—microplastics pollution is a local problem affecting environmental and public health.

Microplastics have the potential to harm human health because they easily absorb toxic chemicals. If we drink water containing microplastics or eat seafood that’s ingested microplastics, we’re exposing ourselves to those chemicals, too [3]. Communities with close connections to water as a source of food have the potential to experience greater impacts from microplastics pollution.

This page is a place to collect and organize resources on microplastics pollution and monitoring. Visit the microplastics tag page to see the latest community posts about microplastics on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by subscribing:

Subscribe to microplastics

Sources and more information on what microplastics are: [1] NOAA, what are microplastics? [2] Masura et al. 2015 [3] Karbalaei et al. 2018

On this page you can:
See community stories and projects on microplastics

Join the conversation
  • Ask a question, answer a question, or follow future questions on microplastics
  • Post an issue brief that describes your local concern related to microplastics
Research microplastics pollution Learn about regulations, policies, and advocacy related to microplastics

Find further reading and resources on microplastics

See what’s still unknown and next step challenges in microplastics monitoring

Community stories and projects

Tunnell_et_al_2020_graph_abstract_small.jpg

Image from Tunnell et al. 2020, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2019.110794, CC BY 4.0.

Lavaca Bay residents win $50-million settlement with Formosa Plastics

What was the issue?

In 2009, Diane Wilson, an environmental activist and retired shrimper in Seadrift, Texas, noticed hundreds of small plastic pellets (nurdles) polluting the shores and waterways of Lavaca Bay on the Gulf Coast. The area is home to a generations-old fishing community, tourism industry, and a plastic pellet manufacturing plant run by Formosa Plastics.

How did they research the issue?

Diane and other local residents, including former Formosa plant workers and members of the San Antonio Bay Estuarine Waterkeeper, went out on foot and by kayak to collect plastic pellets by hand, visiting multiple sites, several times a week, over several years.

They teamed up with an environmental scientist who wrote a report documenting the pollution, outlining its potential harm on the ecosystem, and recommending that Formosa stop releasing pellets immediately and monitor their outfalls into the Bay. And, they worked with Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, who provided free legal services.

Using data from another citizen initiative to document plastic pellet pollution along the Gulf Coast, Diane and the Lavaca Bay residents could show that the highest pellet counts occurred near the Formosa Plastics plant in Point Comfort.

What did they do with their findings?

Over the years, Diane appealed to state regulators, the EPA, and the US Fish & Wildlife Service. Despite a $13-million fine in 2009, Formosa continued to illegally dump plastic pellets into local waters.

The residents eventually amassed over 2000 samples of plastic pellets and powder, storing them in large bins and cardboard boxes as evidence of illegal dumping. As Formosa continued to pollute the Bay and regulators failed to enforce compliance, in 2017, Diane and the San Antonio Bay Estuarine Waterkeepers sued Formosa in federal court for violating the Clean Water Act. The judge approved an historic $50-million settlement that will fund cleaning up, monitoring, and preventing further pollution. It will also fund community groups, like the citizen science project Nurdle Patrol. Formosa also agreed to zero-discharge of plastic pellets going forward.

More on this story:

A Solidified Oil Spill (S.O.S.) on the Fraser River

Two volunteers from the Surfrider Foundation of Vancouver Island, BC, Canada, share their story of tracking down plastic pellet pollution and its source along the Fraser River in this short documentary film.

More on this story:

Latest community stories

A “nurdle apocalypse” in the Mississippi River

The pandemic and plastic pollution

British Columbia is funding coastal communities to clean up marine debris as their typical sources of income from ecotourism decline because of COVID-19.

Do you have a project or story to share? Start a project page or write a blog post and add the tag microplastics, or post links here!


Join the conversation

Questions from the community

  • See if other community members are asking questions like yours
  • Ask a question so other community members can offer support
  • Sign up below to be notified when someone asks a microplastics question

Title Author Updated Likes Comments
Does the amount of micro-plastics vary depending on different locations? @Crescents22 almost 3 years ago 1
What do I do with microplastics after being collected? @lukoyedith over 3 years ago 2
Will high turbidity levels affect the babylegs trawl? @stevie over 4 years ago 1
What are ways we could model the absorption of chemicals by plastic waste? @mimiss over 4 years ago 1
How many squid should I dissect to determine the average amount of micro plastics in squid guts? @plasticsquid almost 5 years ago 3
Analysis of microplastics: are there platforms or support for this work? @Bronwen over 5 years ago 1
What are rope sourcing tips for making a BabyLegs trawl? @warren over 5 years ago 4
What do I do with microplastics after being collected? @warren over 5 years ago 4
Can i make a microplastic filter by just putting a nylon over the drain of my washing machine? @hikinghack over 5 years ago 4
Can the Community Microscope analyze ocean microplastics? @jiteovien over 6 years ago 7
How to process microplastic samples from a trawl @maxliboiron over 6 years ago 0
Can plastic trawls be used in rivers? @warren over 6 years ago 3
Can you detect pvc microplastics with a nvdi camera? @Ag8n over 6 years ago 5
Has anyone experienced measuring and analyzing microplastics? @niklasjordan over 6 years ago 4
How can I identify bits of plastic from the beach in an image? @jlev over 6 years ago 17
Could the Raspberry Pi Microscope be used for looking at microplastics found in ocean water? @stevie over 6 years ago 5
looking for ideas to detect/remove micro-beads/micro-fibers in water @vibhor about 8 years ago 2


Post an Issue Brief

Share a local concern or issue related to microplastics pollution and get support from the Public Lab community by writing and posting an Issue Brief. Visit “Write an Issue Brief” to find information on what an issue brief is, see examples, and learn how to write one.


Research microplastics pollution

Check out research notes and activities below to see how community members are investigating microplastics or to post your own ideas or stories.

Further below, you’ll find more information on how you can get started in microplastics research.

Research notes

Posts written by Public Lab community members and tagged with microplastics will appear here. Write a note about your own research or story here!

Title Author Updated Likes Comments
Chattahoochee Challenge: Connecting Students Across a Watershed @rebeccaMw almost 2 years ago 0
Collecting Microplastics in City Park @bhamster almost 2 years ago 0
Operation Pollution Sucks: ~$100 nurdle sucker upper from commercial sources @eustatic over 2 years ago 0
Event: Messages from the Mississippi Student Art Exhibition @a1ahna over 2 years ago 0
World Laws Versus Federal and State Drinking Water Legislation @TheChessGym over 2 years ago 0
Increasing Microplastic Pollutants, Diminishing Drinkable Water Sources, and People With No Access @TheChessGym over 2 years ago 0
Microplastics, Pollution, Landfill, and Trash Amid Exploding World Population @TheChessGym over 2 years ago 0
"Worldometer" The Alarming Rise Of The World's Population Amid Depleting Water Resources @TheChessGym over 2 years ago 0
Private Drinking Water Well @TheChessGym over 2 years ago 2
The Effects Of Microplastics On Drinking Water @TheChessGym over 2 years ago 1
Microplastics Discovered in Human Blood @TheChessGym over 2 years ago 0
WAVe -Microplastic Pollution in the Mississippi River Research @TheChessGym almost 3 years ago 1
Microplastic Intrusion To The Great Lakes @TheChessGym almost 3 years ago 1
The Formation and Beginning of "Public Lab" @TheChessGym almost 3 years ago 4
Where are missing 99% of microplastic pollution in the ocean? @TheChessGym almost 3 years ago 0
Does the amount of micro-plastics vary depending on different locations? @Crescents22 almost 3 years ago 1
Microplastics In The Drinking Water---Dr. Scott Coffin @TheChessGym almost 3 years ago 2
Microplastics' Intrusion To The Human Body @TheChessGym almost 3 years ago 0
Lesson One- STEM MICROPLASTIC POLUTION -PUBLIC LAB @TheChessGym almost 3 years ago 1
Adapted sampling for the Babylegs Kit @rebeccaMw almost 3 years ago 2
St. John STEM MAGNET - Microplastics and the Mississippi River @Kwame about 3 years ago 135
Post-Ida Nurdle Spill from Plastic Rail Car derailment: lessons from Raceland @eustatic over 3 years ago 8
collecting microplastics @McKennaUral over 3 years ago 0
2021 US EPA Region 2 Citizen Science Water Monitoring Equipment Loan Program @liz over 3 years ago 0


Activities

Activities on Public Lab that have been tagged with microplastics will appear here

Purpose Category Status Author Time Difficulty Replications
How to analyze plastics forensically - - @maxliboiron - - 0 replications: Try it »
How to use BabyLegs - - @maxliboiron - - 0 replications: Try it »
Building BabyLegs (surface water trawl) - - @maxliboiron - - 0 replications: Try it »
How to process microplastic samples from a trawl - - @maxliboiron - - 0 replications: Try it »
Re3DP Trawl - - @TestOurWaters - - 0 replications: Try it »
Nurdle Patrol’s 10-minute beach survey for plastic pellets - - @bhamster - - 0 replications: Try it »
Bridge Trawl - - @TestOurWaters - - 0 replications: Try it »
Build a low-magnification "dissection microscope" for microplastics - - @warren - - 0 replications: Try it »
Sort and identify plastic polymer debris by density - - @bhamster - - 0 replications: Try it »
BabyLegs in the classroom - - @maxliboiron - - 0 replications: Try it »
Testing Different Types of Water for Microplastics - - @badgirlsclub - - 0 replications: Try it »

Activities should include a materials list, costs and a step-by-step guide to construction with photos. Learn what makes a good activity here.


Overview of approaches and preparing for research

(a graphic of main approaches here!)

  • The approach you use to research microplastics pollution will depend on your location and ease of access to the pollution, what equipment is readily available, and what you hope to learn or do with the results you find.
  • The most accessible tools and methods described on this page will help you visually identify microplastics down to about 1 mm in size. These might miss small but abundant plastics like microfibers and microbeads.
  • If you’re using plastic equipment to collect microplastics, be aware of possible contamination in your sample. Using brightly colored items can help identify possible contamination. Contamination can also come from nearby objects like fleece clothes and plastic bags used to hold equipment or samples.


Methods for monitoring microplastics

Below you’ll find information on how you can get started in microplastics monitoring in your community, with a focus on more readily available tools. The process is broken down into sampling, processing, analyzing data, and what to do with your data.

Detailed posts on methods published on Public Lab and tagged with microplastics will appear here: https://publiclab.org/methods#microplastics.

Do you have a tool or method to share? Start a method page and add the tag microplastics!

Collecting your sample

Are you near a coastal beach? A freshwater stream? A city canal? There are ways to collect microplastics in all these places.

Common locations where you might sample microplastics:

  • Beaches (sandy, rocky), shorelines, often accessed on foot
  • Water (ocean, rivers, streams, lakes), accessed by bridge or boat, or on foot for rivers

General sampling advice:

  • Wear gloves! Be aware of nearby sewage outflow, murky water (avoid trawling in murky water)
  • If sampling from water, stay out of wakes from boats, from bridge poles, pilings, etc., they churn up water and mix contents
  • Make a record of all the plastic you’ve been using so you know where possible contamination can come from. E.g., plastic bags, nylon rope, etc. Avoid wearing fleece clothes while working with microplastics.
  • Make a note of recent environmental conditions that might affect how you sample and how much you’ll find: recent rains or tides, flow speed of water bodies, direction of winds in the area.
Survey a beach or shoreline and pick up by hand
nurdles
Timed nurdle survey
  • Nurdle Patrol in the US Gulf Coast has a 10-minute survey outlined in this post.
  • Great Nurdle Hunt in the UK has a variable-time survey outlined on their website, plus tips, suggested equipment, an ID sheet, and data collection form.
  • Easy to do, needs minimal and inexpensive materials.
  • Data produced: nurdle counts over a period of time at a particular location; photos.

Image: hockadilly, CC BY SA

riverbank
Larger microplastics sampling on a riverbank
  • The Plastic Pirates campaign in the EU outlines a method in their project booklet (pg. 26) for sampling microplastics larger than 1 mm from sandy riverbanks.
  • Great for young people aged 10-16 years! The Plastic Pirates website has support materials and guides for teachers and youth, and instructions on how to build a sampling sieve.
  • Data produced: larger microplastic pieces per square meter.
NOAAshorelinesurvey
Beach transect surveys

Image: NOAA, public domain

scoopandsift
Cleaning up a nurdle spill

A post from @eustatic that outlines different ways to clean up nurdles: Sweep and Pan vs Scoop and Sift: Methods for Nurdle Retrieval. Some of these methods and tools could probably be incorporated into other survey methods described above.

Image: @eustatic, CC BY SA



Collect from water using a surface trawl

Surface trawls generally consist of a net or filter attached to a rigid frame, which is attached to a rope. The net captures items from the water.

Do you have to know where the microplastics are before trawling? Not necessarily!

Biased trawl: if you sample through a specific location where you see visible trash pollution.
Unbiased trawl: If you sample through a location to see what you’ll find.

Why might you use a trawl rather than just an aquarium net with a handle?

The attached rope enables you to tow the net from behind a boat in open water, tie the net to a tree or stake if you’re sampling a river, or dangle the net from a bridge or broomstick if you’re sampling a canal or shoreline.

babylegstrawl
BabyLegs

Image: @maxliboiron, CC BY SA

bridgetrawl
Bridge Trawl
  • DIY surface trawl designed by Testing Our Waters that you can dangle from a bridge into a waterway, where the current can float debris into the net.
  • Easy to build, inexpensive materials that are easy to get.
  • Data produced: relative amounts of microplastics.

Image: @TestOurWaters, CC BY SA

icecreamscooptrawl
Ice Cream Scoop Trawl
  • Developed by the Dairy Queens from CLEAR, a trawl for collecting plastic debris (maybe larger microplastics) that you can tow while walking in water.
  • Great for educators and kids! Made from an old ice cream container, kids can help with the build.
  • Data produced: tests for the presence of plastic debris in water.

Image: CLEAR Dairy Queens, CC BY

microplastics
Plastic Pirates sampling protocol for larger floating microplastics
  • The Plastic Pirates campaign in the EU outlines a method in their project booklet (pg. 20) for sampling floating trash (including microplastics larger than 1 mm) from rivers.
  • Aimed at young people aged 10-16 years! The Plastic Pirates website has support materials and guides for teachers and youth, and a sampling net you can borrow.
  • Data produced: larger microplastic pieces per 1000 L.

Image: Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program, CC BY NC

mantatrawl
Research grade surface trawls

These trawls usually aren’t readily available to most people but are included here to show the breadth of tools out there.

  • Manta Trawl ($3500) or LADI Trawl ($500 DIY trawl; link contains build instructions and design files) with a defined net size down to 0.335 mm. This is a standard size for publishing research in scientific journals.
  • Boat is required to tow the trawl at the surface of open water.
  • Microplastics are isolated, dried, and weighed. The amount of water that flowed through the net can be calculated.
  • Data produced: concentration of microplastics (in weight or # items per surface area or volume).

Image: Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program, CC BY NC


Collect from water using a container: “grab sample”

(image here!)

To do a grab sample, you fill a non-plastic container with a known volume of surface water and filter the sample later to analyze it.

You can use this method to sample a greater range of locations and smaller microplastics than surface trawls, with lower-cost equipment. Processing and analyzing the sample will likely need laboratory equipment, especially if you’re looking for microplastics smaller than 1 mm in size.

Check out this paper for a description of the procedure: Barrows et al. 2017. Grab vs. neuston tow net: a microplastic sampling performance comparison and possible advances in the field. Analytical Methods, 9: 1446-1453. PDF.

Processing your sample

If you used a net or filter to collect microplastics, next you’ll process your sample. This means removing the materials from your filter and drying them so you can analyze them further.

See the note How to process microplastic samples from a trawl from @maxliboiron for instructions using readily accessible materials.

Analyzing your sample

If you need to sort through your dried sample to identify, isolate, and count microplastics, read on for information on how you can analyze your sample.

Step-by-step how to analyze your sample forensically: This post from @maxliboiron includes a list of readily available materials, easy-to-follow instructions, tips on identifying microplastics, and lots of photos of different kinds of microplastics.

More involved analysis methods that require lab equipment are described in “Laboratory methods for the analysis of microplastics in the marine environment: recommendations for quantifying synthetic particles in waters and sediments,” from the US NOAA Marine Debris program.

Resources on materials and tools for analysis

Identification guides

Visual guides that can help you tell what’s plastic and what’s not, and what kinds of plastic you have.

Dissecting scope

A low-magnification dissecting scope can be helpful for viewing and analyzing microplastics.

dissecting-scope_sm.jpeg

Image by @warren, originally in the post, “Can the Community Microscope analyze ocean microplastics?

Build a low-magnification "dissection microscope" for microplastics: this post by @warren gives step-by-step instructions on how to adapt the Community Microscope (which you can buy here) into a dissecting scope! The key is to have a light source and lens on the same side, pointing down toward your plastic sample sitting on top of a slide or small tray.

Have you used an adapted Community Microscope to look at microplastics? Please share a research note with your images!

Other assorted items

  • Graph / grid paper: you might find a printed grid with regularly-spaced lines, e.g., 1 mm graph paper, useful if you want to know the size of pieces in your sample.
  • Black light! Many plastics will glow under a black light. This tip comes from David Boudinot and Daniel Brendle-Moczuk, plastic pellet researchers with the Surfrider Foundation of Vancouver Island.
What the data can look like
  • Photos of your processed microplastics sample
  • Microscope images/photos of your sample
  • A count of the total number of microplastics in your sample. Depending on your collection method, this may be a count per time or estimated area.
  • A description of the size and type of microplastics in your sample. Seeing lots of one kind of plastic in your sample can indicate a common source of plastics local to your area.
Analysis methods for peer-reviewed research

Instruments that use spectrometry (like Fourier Transform-Infrared and Raman spectroscopy) measure how infrared light interacts with and reflects off a material, producing a spectral image unique to that material. Comparing spectra from your sample material to spectra from known polymer materials can reveal the chemical makeup of microplastics in your sample. These instruments are often expensive, but check out the links below for open source, cheaper options!

Open source tools for spectrometry

  • RamanPi: 3D-printable Raman spectrometer by flatCat
  • OpenSpecy: online tool to analyze, share, process, and identify your Raman and IR spectra. By W. Cowger, A. Gray, H. Hapich, C. Rochman, J. Lynch, S. Primpke, K. Munno, H. De Frond, O. Herodotou.

Do you have open source tools of your own? Post them here!

What can you do with your data?

You’ve collected microplastics, processed and analyzed them, and now you have data! What can you do with it?

Reporting nurdle / plastic pellet counts

  • Nurdle Patrol has a reporting form where you can submit your data and see your count appear on their map. Check out this post for more information.
  • The Great Nurdle Hunt also has a place to submit data and see your count on a map.

Reporting all marine debris

  • US NOAA Marine Debris Tracker is an app you can use to submit data on all kinds of marine debris. Microplastics data are number per unit area.

Do you know about other databases for reporting microplastic pollution, or are you interested in creating an open database? See the next step challenges below, or share your ideas in a research note!

Emerging methods and technologies

Where is microplastics monitoring going next? If you’re interested in developing community tools for microplastics research, this section might offer some ideas on what work is happening.

Techniques for quickly analyzing large amounts of microplastics

Known as “high-throughput techniques.” Technical labs will carry out the techniques, but eventually, individuals and communities may be able to collect a microplastics sample and then send it to the lab for affordable analysis.

More standards on plastic pollution research methods and reporting

Microplastics research is a quickly-growing field! And there are many ways to collect, prepare, and analyze samples. Having common protocols for monitoring and reporting on microplastics will help make it easier for everyone to share and compare data.


Regulations, policy, and advocacy

Federal regulations

What regulations exist, what agencies are in charge, and how does enforcement work or not work?

  • US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Does not regulate microplastics specifically, but more broadly regulates marine debris through their Marine Debris Program. Coordinates regional projects across the country.
  • US Coast Guard: normally responds to pollution and spills of things categorized as “hazardous” in US navigable waters. Industrial plastic pellets (nurdles), which often do end up in the water, are NOT categorized as a hazardous material.
  • US Fish & Wildlife Service: responds to pollution and hazardous spills on public lands through its Environmental Contaminants program.
  • Microbead-Free Waters Act of 2015: Congress passed this law banning “the manufacturing, packaging, and distribution of rinse-off cosmetics containing plastic microbeads.”

A success story from Nurdle Patrol!

Quoting Jace Tunnell of Nurdle Patrol and his collaborators in Texas:

"Nurdle Patrol data has resulted in action from some but not all of the federal, state, and local agencies. Examples of responsive agencies include The Texas Water Development Board, which is examining the possibility of using its hindcasting models to determine where the nurdles might have originated. TPWD [Texas Parks & Wildlife Department] has expressed interest in developing methodology to calculate how many nurdles are present per mile when a spill occurs. TCEQ [Texas Commission on Environmental Quality] is discussing their role in stormwater permitting for the manufacturing facilities, a possible source for nurdles based on evidence of high concentrations in manufacturer facilities near Galveston."

(Tunnell et al. 2020, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2019.110794, CC BY 4.0)

What’s happening in microplastics regulation

California leads the way in regulating microplastics in drinking water

What advocacy can communities do?

Do you have ideas on what advocacy communities can do with microplastics data they gather? Or a story to share on how you’ve dealt with this issue? Post a research note and it’ll appear in the Research Notes grid above!


Further reading and resources


Next step challenges

What are some areas where microplastics monitoring and tool development could improve or go next? What questions remain?

A place for open community data?

  • Would people find it helpful to have an open database where anyone can upload, view, and use various data on microplastics? Including counts, density measurements, and photos and microscope images?
  • With many protocols and limited standardization across the microplastics research field making data comparisons challenging, what groups working to share data and make them more widely available?

Standardized methods for everyone

  • The US EPA has drafted “Escaped Trash Assessment Protocols” under their Trash Free Waters program. These are intended to be standardized methods for collecting, categorizing, and reporting trash (including plastics), that can be done anywhere. Are these methods really universal? Can standardized data be more effectively used in regulation or enforcement, or to inform policy?

Microplastics monitoring in air and soil

  • What questions, methods, and study designs do we have around microplastics in air and soil? We know they’re there. We’ve only scratched the surface with water and shoreline survey methods above.

Do you have anything to share about these challenges? Ideas on how to approach them? Or want to discuss other challenges not included here? Please post a research note and link it here!