Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

Hot-Specialist-6824 t1_j69dzbs wrote

Disappear from the surface is the key phrase. Most of it's still there, just in micro particles which still get eaten by sea life, still enter the food chain, still poison and kill.

35

Taxoro t1_j69j2ao wrote

>Floating microplastic is broken down into ever smaller, invisible nanoplastic particles that spread across the entire water column, but also to compounds that can then be completely broken down by bacteria.

5

tjcanno t1_j69elm9 wrote

Please cite scientific studies that back those claims up. Not just arm waving scaremongering.

−7

scaleofthought t1_j69iivp wrote

... do you really need a 55 page scientific study that you'll never read to logically explain that UV light doesn't make plastic magically vanish?

Or uh.... Can we just assume within reason that plastic just doesn't disappear because the weather was good, and rather UV light makes plastic brittle, causing it to break down into micro plastics?

8

tjcanno t1_j6a5e36 wrote

You totally misinterpret my question. Do you have any studies to show that when the polymer breaks down in UV that the products are poisonous?

I am not questioning that UV breaks down the polymer. I have seen it firsthand.

6

DaDutchBoyLT1 t1_j69ir68 wrote

A basic understanding of material science.

2

tjcanno t1_j6a4x8f wrote

As the polymers decompose in the UV, they break down to pieces as small as monomers. Do bacteria consume them? Naturally occurring microbes break down hydrocarbons in the ocean. It is reasonable to expect that something similar happens with polymers and monomers. So can anyone point to any research on that? Why is it assumed that the products of the UV degradation are poisonous?

4

atetuna t1_j6a32xh wrote

What's the point when you already ignore the scientific studies that support climate change?

−4

tjcanno t1_j6a54n4 wrote

Not true. And what does UV degradation of polymers have to do with climate change?

6