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02-06-2017 01:54 PM
The innovation of synthetic fleece has allowed many outdoor enthusiasts to hike with warmth and comfort. But what many of these fleece-wearing nature-lovers don't know is that each wash of their jackets and pullovers releases thousands of microscopic plastic fibers, or microfibers into the environment — from their favorite national park, to agricultural lands, to waters with fish that make it back onto our plates.
This has scientists wondering: are we eating our sweaters' synthetic microfibers?
Probably, says Chelsea Rochman, an ecologist and evolutionary biologist at the University of Toronto, St. George. "Microfibers seem to be one of the most common plastic debris items in animals and environmental samples," Rochman says.
In fact, peer-reviewed studies have shown that these synthetic microfibers — a type of plastic smaller than a millimeter in length and made up of various synthetic polymers — have popped up in table salt in China, in arctic waters and in fish caught off the coast of California. These tiny fibers make up 85 percent of human debris on shorelines across the globe, according to a 2011 study. They're basically inescapable. So it's not unlikely they're finding their way into the human diet, especially in seafood.
02-06-2017 02:22 PM
Being environmentally aware has been a way of life for me most of my life. I've known about this "clothing pollution" in our oceans for quite sometime. It's not only microfiber, a relatively new material in the market, but also the chemicals used to make some of the latest fiber, namely rayon from bamboo. I am an advocate of purchasing eco-friendly material when it comes to my clothing. I would like to see more people do the same.
02-06-2017 02:45 PM
@Marp That is very disturbing.I always thought those fleece items were a way to keep plastics out of the dump but never thought it get worse.I think we are such a disposable society that those fibers too quickly end up in a landfill anyway.
02-06-2017 02:59 PM
This is new to me.
What items do you use or not use?
Are you sensitive to chemicals?
02-06-2017 03:01 PM
Think that's bad?
There are also pharmacuticals in our water, and food.
02-06-2017 03:33 PM
@LTT1 wrote:
This is new to me.
What items do you use or not use?
Are you sensitive to chemicals?
I usually try to buy clothing that is made of natural fibers like cotton and wool. But that's often hard to do when it seems everything has some kind of man-made fiber in it. Polyester and nylon are two that seem most popular and have great improvements in their production as far as toxic waste generated from their production. I am not particularly sensitive to an one chemical but I know for a fact that many clothing items coming from over seas is treated with some kind of substance. These substances can be used for softening, pesticide or dye fixatives that can be caustic to skin. Best wash any and all clothing before wearing...especially if it's made over seas. Rayon from bamboo is a fabric that takes bamboo trees (sustainable) but then toxic chemicals are added to the bamboo pulp to dissolve it into rayon. Waste by-products from this process is so highly toxic and ends up in the water. There is no EPA in most parts of the world. Many of the rayon manufacturing factories are working to improve on toxic waste production....and this is a slow going process in the countries that don't enforce regulations.
02-06-2017 03:59 PM
So if you're eating 'wild' fish, you're eating plastic?
Reason 9567 to not eat animals. 🙃
02-06-2017 04:03 PM
Im going to sound like the commercial for "The more you know!"
So, the more I know, the better.
They fooled me with bamboo.
02-06-2017 06:44 PM
Very interesting. Something I had never even thought of. Now I will go search for more information and sources. Thanks for posting.
02-06-2017 07:09 PM - edited 02-06-2017 07:13 PM
Between the microfiber and dog hair that I swallow, I'll probably produce a huge synthetic hairball one of these days.
Have you heard about the micro beads in toothpaste and facial exfoliants? They get in the water systems and are absorbed by fish.
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