Plastic litter is a growing problem around the world, and new research shows that the bottom of Lake Tahoe is no exception. In one of the first studies to utilize scuba divers to collect litter from a lakebed, 673 plastic items were counted from just a small fraction of the lake.
In the study, published in the November issue of the journal Applied Spectroscopy, researchers from DRI and the UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center teamed up with the nonprofit Clean Up the Lake to take a close look at the litter.
First, scientists broke it down into categories based on use (such as food containers and water bottles), followed by the chemical composition of the plastic.
The knowledge gained can help scientists better understand the source of large pieces of litter in the lake, as well as whether they're a significant source of microplastics as larger pieces break down and degrade.
Previous research found that the waters of Lake Tahoe contain high levels of microplastics, defined as plastics smaller than a pencil eraser.
"There's very little work on submerged plastic litter in lakes," said Monica Arienzo, Ph.D., associate research professor of hydrology at DRI and one of the study's lead authors.
"And I think that's a real issue, because when we think about how plastics may be moving in freshwater systems, there's a good chance that they'll end up in a lake."
To collect the litter, research divers swam transects along the lakebed near Lake Tahoe Nevada State Park and Zephyr Cove, covering 9.3 kilometers.
They found an average of 83 pieces of plastic litter per kilometer, with the lakebed near Hidden Beach and South Sand Harbor showing significantly more (140 items/km and 124 items/km, respectively). No stretches of the lakebed surveyed were free of plastic litter.
The most common plastic litter categories were food containers, bottles, plastic bags, and toys, along with many items that couldn't be categorized.
"There's a lot of education we can do, as well as continuing to work on reducing the use of those plastics," Arienzo says.
"Because we have to start thinking about turning that plastic pipe off."
Arienzo and co-author Julia Davidson, then an undergraduate student working in Arienzo's lab, also identified the types of plastic that made up 516 of the litter samples.
Using an instrument that uses infrared light to fingerprint and identify the material, they found that the six most common plastics were polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polystyrene, polyester/polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene, polypropylene, and polyamide.
Collecting this information can contribute to Arienzo's ongoing microplastics research in the region, helping to identify the sources of the small plastic fragments.
"When we study microplastics, we only have the chemical information, or the plastic type," Davidson says.
"We don't know where it came from -- a plastic bag, toy, or otherwise -- because it's just a tiny piece of plastic. But now we can use this litter data to point to the dominant types of plastics and compare them to microplastic data."
The study can help inform efforts by Tahoe-area communities to address plastic litter, such as South Lake Tahoe's 2022 ban on single-use plastic bottles and Truckee's ban on single-use food containers.
The research also highlights ways that scientists can work with nonprofits to collect data that can address local environmental concerns.
Read more at Science Daily
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