
The life of microplastic: how fragments move through plants, insects, animals
The story starts with a single thread of polyester, dislodged from the weave of a cheap, pink acrylic jumper as it spins around a washing machine. This load of washing will shed hundreds of thousands of
tiny plastic fragments and threads
– up to 700,000 in this one washing machine cycle.
Along with billions of other microscopic, synthetic fibres, our thread travels through household wastewater pipes. Often, it ends up as sewage sludge, being spread on a farmer's field to help crops grow. Sludge is used as organic fertiliser across the US and Europe, inadvertently turning the soil into a huge global reservoir of microplastics. One wastewater treatment plant in Wales found 1 per cent of the weight of sewage sludge was plastic.
From here, it works its way up the food chain through insects, birds, mammals and even humans. Perhaps our jumper's life as a garment will end soon, lasting only a few outings before it emerges from the wash shrunken and bobbling, to be discarded. But our thread's life will be long. It might have only been part of a jumper for a few weeks, but it could voyage around the natural world for centuries.
Into the world of soil and worms
Spread on the fields as water or sludge, our tiny fibre weaves its way into the fabric of soil ecosystems. A worm living under a wheat field burrows its way through the soil, mistaking the thread for a bit of old leaf or root. The worm consumes it – but cannot process it like ordinary organic matter.
READ MORE
The worm joins nearly one in three earthworms that contain plastic, according to a study published in April, as well as a quarter of slugs and snails that ingest plastic as they graze across soil. Caterpillars of peacock, powder blue and red admiral butterflies all contain plastic too, perhaps from feeding on leaves contaminated with it, research shows.
[
Microplastics are in the heart, lungs, penis, breast milk. Can we keep them out of our bodies?
Opens in new window
]
With the plastic in its gut, the burrowing earthworm will find it more difficult to digest nutrients, and is likely to start shedding weight. The damage might not be visible but for insects, eating plastic has been linked to stunted growth, reduced fertility and problems with the liver, kidney and stomach. Even some of the tiniest lifeforms in our soil, such as mites and nematodes – which help maintain the fertility of land – are negatively affected by plastic.
Plastic pollution in the marine environment has been widely documented, but a UN report found soil contains more microplastic pollution than the oceans. This matters not only for the health of soils, but because creepy crawlies such as beetles, slugs and snails form the building blocks of food chains. Our worm is now enabling this plastic fibre to become an international traveller.
Up the food chain, into mammals and birds
In a suburban garden, a hedgehog snuffles through a dozen invertebrates in a night, consuming plastic fibres within them as it goes. One of them is our worm.
A study that looked at the faeces of seven hedgehogs, found four of them contained plastics, one of which contained 12 fibres of polyester, some of which were pink. The same study found mice, voles and rats were also eating plastic, either directly or via contaminated prey.
Birds that eat insects such as swifts, thrushes and blackbirds are also ingesting plastic via their prey. A study earlier this year found for the first time that birds have microplastics in their lungs because they are inhaling them too. 'Microplastics are now ubiquitous at every level of the food web,' says Prof Fiona Mathews, environmental biologist at the University of Sussex. The meat, milk and blood of farm animals also contain microplastics.
[
Microplastics: how dangerous are they and how can we reduce our risk?
Opens in new window
]
At the top of the food chain, humans consume at least 50,000 microplastic particles a year. They are in our food, water, and the air we breathe. Fragments of plastic have been found in blood, semen, lungs, breast milk, bone marrow, placenta, testicles and the brain.
Washing into rivers and blowing in the wind
Even as it makes its way up the animal food chain, our polyester fibre has not been broken down. At some point, the thread returns to the dirt when the creature that consumed its host dies, and a new adventure starts. The body will decay, but the polyester fibre will endure. Once in the soil, it is ploughed in by the farmer before crops are sown. But it may not stay there for long – strong winds blow the dry, degraded soil into the air, taking with it a pink fragment of plastic. In heavy rain, the fibre could be swept into a river flowing to the sea: a major source of marine contamination is run-off from land.
This process of moving through natural systems over years has been called 'plastic spiralling'. Scientists have found that microplastics equivalent to 300 million plastic water bottles have rained down on the Grand Canyon, Joshua Tree and other US national parks. Even the most remote places are contaminated. One scientist found 12,000 microplastic particles a litre in samples of Arctic sea ice, swept there by ocean currents and blown in by the wind.
Infiltrating plants, flowers and crops
With the passage of time, our plastic thread has still not rotted, but has broken into fragments, leaving tiny pieces of itself in the air, water and soil. Over the course of years, it could become so small that it infiltrates the root cell wall of a plant as it sucks up nutrients from the soil. Nanoplastics have been found in the leaves and fruits of plants and, once inside, they can affect the plant's ability to photosynthesise, research suggests. Here, inside the microscopic systems of the plant, the bits of our pink fibre cause all kinds of havoc – blocking nutrient and water channels, harming cells and releasing toxic chemicals. Staples such as wheat, rice and lettuce have been shown to contain plastic, which is one way they enter the human food chain.
Eight billion tonnes of plastic and counting
From its humble beginnings, our fibre may have journeyed around the world, shedding bits of itself along the way, and working its way into almost every layer of different ecosystems and the far reaches of the natural world. Extracting it once it begins that journey is extremely difficult. The best way to prevent its spread is to stop it at the outset – before the worm, before the soil, before the washing machine, even before the jumper is made.
[
Do plastic chopping boards shed microplastics into food?
Opens in new window
]
Since the 1950s, humans have produced in excess of 8.3 billion tonnes of plastic – equivalent to the weight of one billion elephants. It finds its way into packaging, textiles, agricultural materials and consumer goods. Opting to live without it is almost impossible.
Fast fashion companies, drinks giants, supermarket chains and big agricultural companies have failed to take responsibility for the damage this has caused, says Emily Thrift, who researches plastic in the environment at the University of Sussex. She says individual consumers can reduce their consumption but should not feel that this is entirely their responsibility. 'If you do make this level of waste, there needs to be some form of penalisation for doing it,' she says. 'I truly believe until there is policy and ways to hold big corporations accountable, I don't see it changing much.' – Guardian
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Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Ireland has potential to become global leader in femtech, report says
Ireland could become a global leader in technology, research and innovation focused on women's health, if the right supports are put in the place, a new report has said. The new report, Femtech in Ireland: The Case for Prioritising Women's Health Research and Innovation, is calling on the Government to prioritise the development of femtech in Ireland, by offering greater supports for femtech research and start-ups, and integrate femtech into national health innovation strategies. Ireland has a strong background in medtech, digital health and pharmaceuticals, but femtech is underdeveloped and underfunded, despite women making up half the population. The report is seeking focused funding calls for women's health research and innovation through State agencies, specific funding to commercialise that research, and the establishment of a femtech lab in a healthcare setting with a fast access to clinicliniciansients, data and a test-bed. READ MORE It s also encouraging researchers, clinicians and academics to investigate conditions that affect women only, differently and disproportionately, highlighting the need for the inclusion of sex and gender analysis in research design. The report, which was produced by Health Innovation Hub Ireland (HIHI), and the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at University College Cork (UCC), says improving support for women's health innovation and entrepreneurship could not only address health inequities, but also offer additional economic potential for Ireland, while also strengthening Ireland's life sciences and technology sectors. 'We need to invest in women's health – not just for equality, but because it's smart research, healthcare, and smart economics. There is a real buzz in the femtech innovation sector in Ireland today, with new ideas and start-ups being developed throughout the country,', said Dr Tanya Mulcahy, Director of HIHI and founder of FemTech Ireland. 'We've supported many of them through HIHI, enabling access to clinicians, patients and researchers. It's a sector that is attracting female founders, and provides a new avenue for young researchers, but it's a sector that needs more support- this report is our call to action.' The femtech sector itself is expected to be worth more than $97 billion by 2030, while closing the women's health gap could give the global economy a $1 trillion boost each year by 2040. It could also help unlock new medical treatments and interventions for the wider population. The sector could also encourage more woman founders into the start-up sector, with more than 75 per cent of femtech companies having a woman founder. Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll MacNeill said the report was an important step toward better care for women across Ireland. 'It supports the work we're already doing through the Women's Health Taskforce and highlights how innovation can help us go even further.' The report was also welcomed by Minister for Enterprise, Tourism and Employment Peter Burke. Ireland's first programme to support innovation in women's health, Femtech@HIHI, was launched two years ago. It has now supported more than 30 Irish start-ups that developing everything from wearable tech to track menopause symptoms, to smarter devices for pelvic health and fertility, all aimed at supporting women's health. 'We are witnessing extraordinary advances in healthcare technology and innovation,' said Professor John R Higgins, principal investigator of Health Innovation Hub Ireland and Professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University College Cork and Cork University Maternity Hospital. 'In women's health however, a long-standing gap in research has meant that these innovations have not always translated into meaningful solutions. This gap in evidence directly impacts the development of technologies. Now is the time to bridge that divide – with focused funding, targeted research, and innovation supports.'


Irish Times
3 days ago
- Irish Times
The life of microplastic: how fragments move through plants, insects, animals
The beginning: a single thread The story starts with a single thread of polyester, dislodged from the weave of a cheap, pink acrylic jumper as it spins around a washing machine. This load of washing will shed hundreds of thousands of tiny plastic fragments and threads – up to 700,000 in this one washing machine cycle. Along with billions of other microscopic, synthetic fibres, our thread travels through household wastewater pipes. Often, it ends up as sewage sludge, being spread on a farmer's field to help crops grow. Sludge is used as organic fertiliser across the US and Europe, inadvertently turning the soil into a huge global reservoir of microplastics. One wastewater treatment plant in Wales found 1 per cent of the weight of sewage sludge was plastic. From here, it works its way up the food chain through insects, birds, mammals and even humans. Perhaps our jumper's life as a garment will end soon, lasting only a few outings before it emerges from the wash shrunken and bobbling, to be discarded. But our thread's life will be long. It might have only been part of a jumper for a few weeks, but it could voyage around the natural world for centuries. Into the world of soil and worms Spread on the fields as water or sludge, our tiny fibre weaves its way into the fabric of soil ecosystems. A worm living under a wheat field burrows its way through the soil, mistaking the thread for a bit of old leaf or root. The worm consumes it – but cannot process it like ordinary organic matter. READ MORE The worm joins nearly one in three earthworms that contain plastic, according to a study published in April, as well as a quarter of slugs and snails that ingest plastic as they graze across soil. Caterpillars of peacock, powder blue and red admiral butterflies all contain plastic too, perhaps from feeding on leaves contaminated with it, research shows. [ Microplastics are in the heart, lungs, penis, breast milk. Can we keep them out of our bodies? Opens in new window ] With the plastic in its gut, the burrowing earthworm will find it more difficult to digest nutrients, and is likely to start shedding weight. The damage might not be visible but for insects, eating plastic has been linked to stunted growth, reduced fertility and problems with the liver, kidney and stomach. Even some of the tiniest lifeforms in our soil, such as mites and nematodes – which help maintain the fertility of land – are negatively affected by plastic. Plastic pollution in the marine environment has been widely documented, but a UN report found soil contains more microplastic pollution than the oceans. This matters not only for the health of soils, but because creepy crawlies such as beetles, slugs and snails form the building blocks of food chains. Our worm is now enabling this plastic fibre to become an international traveller. Up the food chain, into mammals and birds In a suburban garden, a hedgehog snuffles through a dozen invertebrates in a night, consuming plastic fibres within them as it goes. One of them is our worm. A study that looked at the faeces of seven hedgehogs, found four of them contained plastics, one of which contained 12 fibres of polyester, some of which were pink. The same study found mice, voles and rats were also eating plastic, either directly or via contaminated prey. Birds that eat insects such as swifts, thrushes and blackbirds are also ingesting plastic via their prey. A study earlier this year found for the first time that birds have microplastics in their lungs because they are inhaling them too. 'Microplastics are now ubiquitous at every level of the food web,' says Prof Fiona Mathews, environmental biologist at the University of Sussex. The meat, milk and blood of farm animals also contain microplastics. [ Microplastics: how dangerous are they and how can we reduce our risk? Opens in new window ] At the top of the food chain, humans consume at least 50,000 microplastic particles a year. They are in our food, water, and the air we breathe. Fragments of plastic have been found in blood, semen, lungs, breast milk, bone marrow, placenta, testicles and the brain. Washing into rivers and blowing in the wind Even as it makes its way up the animal food chain, our polyester fibre has not been broken down. At some point, the thread returns to the dirt when the creature that consumed its host dies, and a new adventure starts. The body will decay, but the polyester fibre will endure. Once in the soil, it is ploughed in by the farmer before crops are sown. But it may not stay there for long – strong winds blow the dry, degraded soil into the air, taking with it a pink fragment of plastic. In heavy rain, the fibre could be swept into a river flowing to the sea: a major source of marine contamination is run-off from land. This process of moving through natural systems over years has been called 'plastic spiralling'. Scientists have found that microplastics equivalent to 300 million plastic water bottles have rained down on the Grand Canyon, Joshua Tree and other US national parks. Even the most remote places are contaminated. One scientist found 12,000 microplastic particles a litre in samples of Arctic sea ice, swept there by ocean currents and blown in by the wind. Infiltrating plants, flowers and crops With the passage of time, our plastic thread has still not rotted, but has broken into fragments, leaving tiny pieces of itself in the air, water and soil. Over the course of years, it could become so small that it infiltrates the root cell wall of a plant as it sucks up nutrients from the soil. Nanoplastics have been found in the leaves and fruits of plants and, once inside, they can affect the plant's ability to photosynthesise, research suggests. Here, inside the microscopic systems of the plant, the bits of our pink fibre cause all kinds of havoc – blocking nutrient and water channels, harming cells and releasing toxic chemicals. Staples such as wheat, rice and lettuce have been shown to contain plastic, which is one way they enter the human food chain. Eight billion tonnes of plastic and counting From its humble beginnings, our fibre may have journeyed around the world, shedding bits of itself along the way, and working its way into almost every layer of different ecosystems and the far reaches of the natural world. Extracting it once it begins that journey is extremely difficult. The best way to prevent its spread is to stop it at the outset – before the worm, before the soil, before the washing machine, even before the jumper is made. [ Do plastic chopping boards shed microplastics into food? Opens in new window ] Since the 1950s, humans have produced in excess of 8.3 billion tonnes of plastic – equivalent to the weight of one billion elephants. It finds its way into packaging, textiles, agricultural materials and consumer goods. Opting to live without it is almost impossible. Fast fashion companies, drinks giants, supermarket chains and big agricultural companies have failed to take responsibility for the damage this has caused, says Emily Thrift, who researches plastic in the environment at the University of Sussex. She says individual consumers can reduce their consumption but should not feel that this is entirely their responsibility. 'If you do make this level of waste, there needs to be some form of penalisation for doing it,' she says. 'I truly believe until there is policy and ways to hold big corporations accountable, I don't see it changing much.' – Guardian


Irish Times
4 days ago
- Irish Times
No one sent up Nazi rocket scientist Wernher von Braun better than satirist Tom Lehrer
For the past year or so, I have been working on a book that centres around the career of the German rocket engineer Wernher von Braun. He was, in his time, among the most celebrated of scientists, and one of the most controversial. As the designer of the Saturn V launch rocket, and as a long-term advocate for the idea of rocket-propelled space travel, he was arguably the central figure of the Apollo moon landings. He was also a former Nazi, a high-ranking SS officer who designed and built the V2 rockets on which Adolf Hitler had pinned his hopes for turning the second World War around in his favour. He was smuggled into the US after the war, along with many top Nazi scientists, by an American government who saw a Cold War arms race on the horizon. READ MORE When I tell people that I am writing about Von Braun, perhaps the most common reaction is to ask whether I have heard the song about him by the US satirical songwriter Tom Lehrer. Von Braun has been if not exactly forgotten then semi-successfully airbrushed out of the popular memory of the moon landings. He is now, somewhat perversely, almost as famous for being the satirical subject of Lehrer's song as he is for being an architect of the US space programme. The song, which Lehrer first performed on the television show That Was The Week That Was in 1965, is a brilliantly witty evisceration of Von Braun, whose reputation had by then been expertly rehabilitated by the US government with the enthusiastic assistance of a fawning media. (Before the space programme got going, Von Braun was already a familiar face on television and in magazines, presenting a starry-eyed vision of a spacefaring American future.) Lehrer's virtuoso performance of the song Wernher von Braun is on YouTube. I highly recommend watching it, as I have countless times over the past couple of years, and several more since learning of Lehrer's death, at age 97, last weekend. Everything about the song from his twinklingly melodious piano accompaniment, cleverly structured around Haydn's melody for the German national anthem, to his air of mordant sophistication is a delight, but its effervescent irony belies a dark and morally serious message. 'Don't say that he's hypocritical/Say, rather, that he's apolitical,' Lehrer croons, before shifting to a jokey German accent: 'Vunce ze rockets are up, who cares vere zey come down?/Zat's not my department, says Wernher von Braun.' The beauty of many of Lehrer's songs is their almost impossibly graceful balance of darkness, cleverness and a kind of literate silliness. Listen, for instance, to the sheer comic relish with which he delivers, in the manner of a Revival-era hymn, his bleak prognosis for human survival in another Cold War-era satirical classic, We Will all Go together when We Go. Or his jaunty, old Broadway style ode to recreational avian assassination, Poisoning Pigeons in the Park: ('When they see us coming/the birdies all try an' hide/But they still go for peanuts/When coated with cyanide.') Probably Lehrer's most enduringly popular number is The Elements Song, a joyful, ingenious recital of the table of chemical elements, set to the propulsive melody of Gilbert and Sullivan's Major-General's Song from The Pirates of Penzance. Although it lacks the mordant wickedness of his best work, it's arguably a key to understanding his lineage, and his influence, as a comic songwriter. When Daniel Radcliffe performed an a cappella version on The Graham Norton Show – prefacing it by introducing Lehrer, correctly, as 'the cleverest and funniest man of the 20th century' – it led to his being cast as 'Weird Al' Yankovic in the parody biopic Weird: The Al Yankovic Story. Although his influence can be charted from Yankovic to Randy Newman and The Simpsons, from Flight of the Conchords to Bo Burnham, the cultural figure with whom I most associate Lehrer has always been the US novelist Thomas Pynchon. Von Braun has his role here, too, in that both artists had the former SS Sturmbannführer's number, at a time when their countrymen still viewed him as a hero with a merely regrettable past. Pynchon's sprawling masterpiece Gravity's Rainbow is set towards the end of the war, and the V2 rocket is at its centre: one of its numerous plot strands concerns a sexually prolific American soldier whose erections predict the exact locations of the rocket's targets. Pynchon's fiction is filled with characters breaking out into song and dance numbers, many of whose comic lyrics might well have come from Lehrer's subversive pen. Although he was somewhat less uncompromising about it than the famously reclusive Pynchon, Lehrer also retreated, in his way, from public life. By the mid-1960s he was a regular fixture on US television and was touring internationally, playing to packed concert halls in Australia and New Zealand. But he never particularly relished playing live and despite his affable stage presence was borderline indifferent to the admiration of his fans. In 1972 he in effect abandoned his musical career, which had in any case only ever been a sideline, a spectacularly successful one though it was. Lehrer was, by trade, a mathematician; early in his career he had worked as a researcher with the Atomic Energy Commission at Los Alamos and he went on to teach at MIT and the University of California, Santa Cruz. He performed his music only very rarely from the 1970s on. The Vietnam War, he said, had made it much harder to be funny about serious things. 'Political satire,' as he memorably put it, 'became obsolete when Henry Kissinger was awarded the Nobel Prize.' Despite his withdrawal from show business, Lehrer was always happy for his music to be used by other artists. Perhaps inevitably, his song The Old Dope Peddler – a queasily saccharine ode to the street narcotics retail business – proved a seductive source for rap producers. When representatives for the US rapper 2 Chainz contacted Lehrer to request sample clearance, Lehrer was delighted. 'As sole copyright owner of The Old Dope Peddler,' the then-85-year-old songwriter and retired academic wrote, 'I grant you motherf***ers permission to do this. Please give my regards to Mr Chainz, or may I call him 2?' In 2020, Lehrer – who had never married and had no children – made the unusual decision to relinquish the copyright on his own songs altogether, releasing them officially into the public domain. It was the last, and perhaps most lasting, act of subversion by a unique and ingenious artist.