Poster Presentation Australian Marine Sciences Association Annual Meeting 2023

Microplastics in Moreton Bay, Southeast Queensland  (#376)

Helen C Bostock 1 , Elvis Dartey Okoffo 2 , Alistair Grinham 3 , Sai Meghna Reddy Gaddam 1 , Josie Yip 1 , Alice Twomey 4 , Emmeline Tan 1
  1. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences , University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
  2. Queensland Alliance for Environmental Health , University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
  3. Civil Engineering , University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
  4. School of Biology , University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

Microplastic (<5 mm) pollution has increased on a global scale. However, we still know relatively little about how much plastic pollution is getting into Australia’s coastal oceans via rivers. In this study we provide the first assessment of the spatial distribution of plastics, the types of plastic and the total budget of sediments in Moreton Bay, Southeast Queensland. We collected a suite of surface sediment samples from Moreton Bay and analysed them for microplastics using the Pyr-GCMS method to analyse for seven polymers (Okoffo et al., 2020). The total plastic concentration varies significantly across the bay. It is unrelated to the mud content of the surface sediments and therefore may be influenced by the density of the plastic and the hydrodynamics in the bay. It may also be affected by a range of sources, with some coming from the rivers, but others from local point sources in the bay.  Polyethylene (used to produce plastic bottles and bays) was the highest concentration of plastic, followed by polyvinyl chloride and polycarbonate. Based on average microplastic concentration in the surface sediments we estimate that the total budget of plastic in the top 10 cm in the bay ranges from 300-400 tonnes.