Microplastics in Freshwater Lakes
Microplastics reach lakes through several pathways. Some arrive as larger items of litter that gradually break down under the influence of sunlight and mechanical abrasion. Others enter as so-called primary microplastics: tiny beads once added to cosmetics and cleaning products, or pellets used in industrial manufacturing. A substantial proportion, however, originates from textiles. Each time synthetic clothing is washed, thousands of microscopic fibres are released into wastewater. Treatment plants capture a portion of these fibres, but many pass through and are discharged into rivers that eventually feed lakes.
The ecological consequences are still being mapped. Small organisms such as zooplankton may ingest microplastic particles, mistaking them for food. Because these creatures sit near the base of the food web, the particles can be transferred upward to fish and, ultimately, to birds and humans. Laboratory studies suggest that ingested microplastics can reduce feeding and impair reproduction in some species, although the effects observed in controlled tanks do not always translate neatly to natural conditions.
Monitoring lakes presents distinct challenges. Unlike oceans, which are continuously mixed by powerful currents, lakes vary enormously in size, depth and circulation. A sample taken near a river mouth may contain far more plastic than one collected in open water only a short distance away. Sediment at the bottom of a lake can act as a long-term archive, trapping particles for years.
Despite these difficulties, scientists agree that prevention is more effective than removal. Bans on microbeads in personal-care products have already been introduced in several countries, and the development of washing-machine filters that trap synthetic fibres offers a promising, if partial, solution. Reducing the volume of plastic entering lakes, researchers stress, remains far cheaper than attempting to clean it out afterwards.