Lake Michigan Big Target for Plastic Pollution

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Environmental groups are hoping a New Year’s resolution for 2017 will be to keep the Great Lakes cleaner. A report by Rochester Institute of Technology estimates 22 million pounds of plastic ends up in the water every year. It also shows debris travels differently in the Great Lakes than in the ocean. The ocean has floating “garbage patches,” but plastics in the Great Lakes are carried by wind and lake currents to shore, and often end up in another state or even across the U-S-Canada border. Lead author Matthew Hoffman says this study is the first picture of the true scale of plastic pollution in the Great Lakes.

Last year, scientists discovered masses of floating plastic particles in lakes Superior, Huron and Erie. This summer, they’re expanding the search to lakes Michigan and Ontario. They are trying to determine whether fish are eating the particles, which may come from city wastewater, and passing them up the food chain to humans.

Hoffman’s team used math to determine where the garbage is coming from and where it ends up. Cities such as Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and Toronto pollute the most. Previous studies highlighted the pollution coming from micro beads, which are used in cosmetic products.

As for how all that debris is harming wildlife, Hoffman says the study didn’t really look at that.

The study found that more than half of the plastic pollution entering the Great Lakes goes into Lake Michigan, followed by lakes Erie and Ontario.

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