International Freshwater Microplastics Network
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Birmingham
Department Name: Sch of Geography, Earth & Env Sciences
Abstract
To date, most research into the impact of microplastics in the environment has focussed on marine (coastal and ocean) environments. However, there is growing acceptance that microplastics are also pervasive within freshwater (river and lake) systems. The limited number of studies from rivers around the world have all found microplastics to be present within samples of river bed sediments or the water column. This is of concern as the ecotoxicological impact of microplastics will likely have a negative impact on a range of freshwater species with an additional public health concern if pollutants associated with microplastics then enter the human food chain. A fundamental issue regarding the science of microplastics in freshwaters is a lack of data with which to generate physically based models. This thus makes it very hard to establish what are 'normal' levels of microplastics within our rivers and hence whether such levels represent an acceptable level of risk to ecosystems or society more generally, or where clean-up or remediation strategies should be targeted. To make meaningful progress, this issue requires international consensus to be agreed quickly so that ongoing and future research efforts can be properly synthesised to provide meaningful evidence-based policy. The purpose of this proposal is to meet this challenge by assembling a new network of internationally leading freshwater microplastics experts. This network will undertake a focused programme of data collection. By pooling this data and using it to generate new numerical models at a series of workshops the network will be able to reach more robust conclusions as to the overall freshwater plastic flux to the oceans. This will address the significant stumbling block the discipline currently faces and thus allow further development of more physically based models. Such a significant deliverable can only be achieved by the sort of networking opportunity that is facilitated by the global partnerships seedcorn fund.
Planned Impact
The main beneficiaries of our research activities will be;
National and international governments who have the responsibility for developing policy to reduce the use of plastics, to reduce the impact of any legacy of plastics which have built up over time and to mitigate any health impacts of plastics on the general public.
Environmental regulators who are tasked with quantifying the scale and nature of MP pollution and for enforcing targets for clean-up which have been agreed by policy makers.
Water utilities that operate sewage/wastewater treatment works and have frontline responsibility for ensuring potable water is safe for consumers.
Engineers who may need to develop new methods and techniques for water utility companies to facilitate the removal of MP from water.
Society for which the issue of MP in the environment has become an important topical issue, in part driven by popular science stories across different media outlets.
The beneficiaries identified above will all benefit in one key way; the quantitative evidence base with which to robustly define the scale of the MP problem in freshwaters will be significantly enhanced, allowing confirmation of current exposure levels nationally and globally. At present, given the ad hoc way in which MP have been sampled we do not know what type of threat is posed by MP pollution in freshwaters. In order for water utility companies to work with engineers to find solutions to removing MP they need to more fully understand the problem they are dealing with, not just in terms of overall MP abundance but also in terms of basic MP characteristics. For example, it is likely that spherical MP particles will move within traditional filter systems differently to fibres or fragments, for example. By generating this type of information we will be able to inform where existing methods work well for removing MP and also where new solutions may be required.
National and international governments who have the responsibility for developing policy to reduce the use of plastics, to reduce the impact of any legacy of plastics which have built up over time and to mitigate any health impacts of plastics on the general public.
Environmental regulators who are tasked with quantifying the scale and nature of MP pollution and for enforcing targets for clean-up which have been agreed by policy makers.
Water utilities that operate sewage/wastewater treatment works and have frontline responsibility for ensuring potable water is safe for consumers.
Engineers who may need to develop new methods and techniques for water utility companies to facilitate the removal of MP from water.
Society for which the issue of MP in the environment has become an important topical issue, in part driven by popular science stories across different media outlets.
The beneficiaries identified above will all benefit in one key way; the quantitative evidence base with which to robustly define the scale of the MP problem in freshwaters will be significantly enhanced, allowing confirmation of current exposure levels nationally and globally. At present, given the ad hoc way in which MP have been sampled we do not know what type of threat is posed by MP pollution in freshwaters. In order for water utility companies to work with engineers to find solutions to removing MP they need to more fully understand the problem they are dealing with, not just in terms of overall MP abundance but also in terms of basic MP characteristics. For example, it is likely that spherical MP particles will move within traditional filter systems differently to fibres or fragments, for example. By generating this type of information we will be able to inform where existing methods work well for removing MP and also where new solutions may be required.
Publications

Kukkola A
(2024)
Snapshot Sampling May Not Be Enough to Obtain Robust Estimates for Riverine Microplastic Loads.
in ACS ES&T water

Kukkola A
(2021)
Nano and microplastic interactions with freshwater biota - Current knowledge, challenges and future solutions.
in Environment international

Krause S
(2021)
Gathering at the top? Environmental controls of microplastic uptake and biomagnification in freshwater food webs.
in Environmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987)

Kukkola A
(2023)
Easy and accessible way to calibrate a fluorescence microscope and to create a microplastic identification key.
in MethodsX
Description | The network of microplastics scholars established for this grant pooled data already collected on individual dimensions of microplastic particles to assemble the first and largest database of its kind. This will enable a proper evidence base from which to convert particle number to particle mass and so generate more realistic estimates of the plastic load entering oceans from rivers. Initial results suggest current estimates are overestimates by at least an order of magnitude. |
Exploitation Route | the outcomes will be useful for water managers in developing management policy to deal with microplastics. |
Sectors | Environment |
Description | Policy Commission on Sustainable Plastics |
Geographic Reach | National |
Policy Influence Type | Contribution to a national consultation/review |
Impact | The report is expected to feed into ongoing environmental regulation updating and refinement, and to support a speedier transition to a circular economy. |
URL | https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/documents/college-eps/plastics/uob-plastics-pc-2024-revised.pdf |
Description | Integrated Cross-Sectoral Solutions to Micro- and Nanoplastic Pollution in Soil and Groundwater Ecosystems (PlasticUnderground) |
Amount | € 248,972,400 (EUR) |
Funding ID | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101072777 |
Organisation | European Commission |
Sector | Public |
Country | Belgium |
Start | 12/2022 |
End | 11/2026 |
Title | Easy and accessible way to calibrate a fluorescence microscope and to create a microplastic identification key |
Description | We presented a technique for setting up detection limits on any fluorescent microscope in conjunction with the fluorophore Nile Red for microplastic identification. Our method also describes a rigorous morphology-specific identification key for microplastics to reduce subjectivity between researchers. The detection limits were established for nine common polymer types and five natural substrates which could result in false-positive signals when using Nile Red for microplastic identification. This method was then applied to real freshwater samples and identified particles were validated with micro-FTIR or Raman spectroscopy. This approach may reduce subjectivity in microplastic identification and counting and enhances transparency, repeatability and harmonization within microplastic research community. • Instructions for calibration of detection limits for microplastics on fluorescence microscope systems described •Microplastic identification key developed and tested to reduce false positive detection •Lower subjectivity for microplastic identification obtained using the detection limits & identification key |
Type Of Material | Improvements to research infrastructure |
Year Produced | 2023 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Impact | A major challenge in microplastics research is the general lack of repeatable and reproducible methodologies. This work, while simple and quite obvious, attempts to address thus by providing an accessible and low-cost simple fluorescence microscope-based approach for quantification of microplastics that will increase the inter-study comparability and enhance the utility of studies for subsequent meta-analysis. |
URL | https://research.birmingham.ac.uk/en/publications/easy-and-accessible-way-to-calibrate-a-fluorescenc... |
Description | The Sustainable Plastics Policy Commission Report - KEY FINDINGS FOR THE UK GOVERNMENT |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | The Sustainable Plastics Policy Commission has put forth recommendations that include revaluing plastic 'waste' to support green growth and stimulate the development of next-generation plastics production and recycling technologies. The report also advocates for best practices in public sector procurement, including protocols on plastics life cycle assessments. Furthermore, the Commission suggests the establishment of a national sustainable plastics innovation research centre to spur innovation and foster long-term, ambitious thinking. The UK Government is in a unique position to establish such a centre, bringing together diverse stakeholders and pooling skills and investment to foster collaboration across academic disciplines and industries. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023,2024 |
URL | https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/centres-institutes/birmingham-plastics-network/policy-commissi... |