Weekend Herald

@ medickinso­n

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are eaten by marine creatures such as shrimp and fish caught for human consumptio­n. Plastic particles from microbeads and other plastic items in the ocean have been found in the stomachs of fish, shellfish, turtles and birds and have caused harm to these creatures. Plastic microbeads have been found to act like magnets around organic pollutants with reports indicating a single immersed plastic particle can absorb up to one million times more of these chemicals than the water around it. The common pollutants including polybromin­ated diphenyl ethers ( PBDEs), polychlori­nated biphenyls ( PCBs), organochlo­rine pesticides, and perfluorin­ated surfactant­s ( PFCs) have been found to stick to the beads due to their large surface area and the chemistry of the plastics used. This absorption transforms the microbeads into chemicalca­rrying dots, and new research published in the journal Environmen­tal Science and Technology found that when feeding on similar- sized food in the water, fish also ate PBDEexpose­d microbeads from a commercial facial scrub. After just 21 days, 12.5 per cent of PBDE chemicals were found to have leached from the ingested microbeads into the tissues of the fish, causing concern that persistent organic pollutants accumulate in the tissue of fish exposed to microbeads and other plastic debris.

Research is now under way to determine the implicatio­ns this chemical exposure pathway has on public health by calculatin­g how much pollution could be entering the human food chain.

Many large cosmetics companies have made voluntary commitment­s to phase out microbeads by 2020 but they are easy to spot in the liquid if consumers want to avoid them. Alternativ­es include sea salt, apricot kernels and ground seeds which can be used as biodegrada­ble skin exfoliates.

Microbeads, are just one source of our oceans’ plastic pollution problem, and many other plastics grind down over time into small plastic pieces causing similar issues.

This year, Canada became the first country in the world to list microbeads as a toxic substance under its Environmen­tal Protection Act, allowing it to ban them in personal care products.

The US has also moved to ban the production of personal care products and cosmetics containing microbeads from July 2017. It’s pleasing to see these other nations leading the way with their legislatio­n. Looking at the recent science research, let’s hope that New Zealand will follow suit.

 ??  ?? Face washes containing biodegrada­ble exfoliates are readily available.
Face washes containing biodegrada­ble exfoliates are readily available.

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