Microplastics in the Environment

What are microplastics?
Definition and size ranges
Microplastics are plastic particles that are generally smaller than 5 millimeters in diameter. They include a broad spectrum of sizes, from visible fragments to particles in the micrometer or even nanometer range. Because of their small size, microplastics can move through water, air, soil, and biota more readily than larger debris, increasing their potential for widespread exposure and transport.
Primary vs secondary microplastics
Primary microplastics are manufactured at small sizes for specific uses, such as microbeads in personal care products or industrial pellets. Secondary microplastics arise from the breakdown of larger plastic items—packaging, bottles, fishing gear, and textiles—that fragment under sunlight, weathering, and mechanical wear. Both types contribute to environmental loads, but their sources and pathways can differ significantly, shaping monitoring and mitigation strategies.
Common polymer types
Several polymers dominate microplastic loads due to their widespread use and durability. Typical types include:
- Polyethylene (PE) and Polypropylene (PP) – common in packaging and consumer goods.
- Polystyrene (PS) – used in foam packaging and certain rigid products.
- Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) – found in bottles and textiles.
- Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and polyurethane (PU) – used in a range of construction and consumer items.
- Polyamide (nylon) and other synthetic fibers – a major component of clothing and fishing gear.
The chemical composition influences how microplastics interact with the environment, including how they sorb pollutants and how they break down under environmental conditions.
Sources and pathways
Urban runoff and wastewater
Stormwater, municipal wastewater, and treated effluent are important routes for microplastics to leave urban landscapes. Wastewater treatment plants can remove a portion of particles, but many microplastics still pass through into rivers and coastal zones. Sludge applied to farmland may also contain plastic particles that re-enter soils and groundwater over time.
Industrial processes and release points
Industrial activities can release microplastics directly or via pellet loss, resin dust, and packaging waste. Accidental spills, handling in manufacturing and logistics, and pneumatic transfers can contribute to local and regional contamination. Infrastructure such as docks, ports, and shipping corridors can accumulate microplastics from multiple sources, creating hotspots of deposition.
Product wear and consumer items
Wear from tires, textiles, and other consumer goods generates microplastics that enter air, water, and soils. Synthetic fibers shed during washing and use are a major source of microplastics in aquatic environments. Personal care products containing microbeads have largely been restricted in many places, yet legacy particles persist in the environment.
Agricultural and fishing practices
Plastic mulch, greenhouse films, irrigation pipes, and agricultural nets contribute microplastics to soils and waterways. In fishing, discarded or lost gear (ghost gear) and degraded net fragments release plastics into marine ecosystems. Pellets and fragments from packaging used in farming and fishing can also become environmental contaminants.
Environmental impacts
Effects on marine, freshwater, and terrestrial ecosystems
Microplastics contaminate air, water, and soils across ecosystems. In aquatic environments, they can alter habitat structure, affect microbial communities, and influence the physical properties of sediments. Terrestrial systems can experience changes in soil structure and moisture dynamics, with potential knock-on effects on plant and soil-dwelling organisms.
Ingestion by wildlife and physical harm
Wildlife may ingest microplastics, mistaken for prey or as accidental contaminants. Ingestion can cause physical blockages, reduced feeding, and suture-like injuries. Over time, accumulation can impair growth, reproduction, and survival, while particles may also transport adhered contaminants into organisms.
Chemical leaching and sorption
Polymers can release additives such as plasticizers and stabilizers, and microplastics can sorb persistent organic pollutants from the surrounding environment. This combination creates a vector for chemical exposure in food webs, potentially altering metabolic processes and health outcomes for wildlife and, by extension, humans through trophic transfer.
Exposure and transport
Air, water, and sediment transport
Microplastics move via multiple pathways: wind can lift and transport fibers and fragments; rivers, streams, and oceans carry particles over long distances; and wind- and water-driven deposition concentrates plastics in sediments and shorelines. Sediments can act as reservoirs, slowly releasing particles back into the environment under changing conditions.
Bioaccumulation and trophic transfer
Once inside organisms, microplastics can accumulate in tissues and organs. Predators can receive accumulated loads through prey, a process known as trophic transfer. While the extent of health effects is still under investigation, repeated exposure across species raises concerns about ecosystem health and potential human exposure through the food chain.
Health implications
Potential human exposure routes
Humans can be exposed to microplastics through the consumption of contaminated seafood and other foods, drinking water, and inhalation of airborne particles. Occupational exposure is a concern for workers in industries handling plastics, where higher concentrations of fibers and dust can lead to respiratory or dermal effects.
Current evidence and knowledge gaps
The evidence linking microplastics to specific health effects in humans is still evolving. While laboratory studies show potential for physical and chemical effects, real-world dose–response relationships remain unclear. Significant gaps exist in understanding long-term exposure, interactions with co-contaminants, and differences across particle sizes, shapes, and polymer types.
Monitoring, data, and measurement
Sampling methods and standardization
Reliable monitoring requires standardized protocols for sampling, extraction, and identification of microplastics across air, water, sediments, and biota. Methodological consistency helps compare data across regions and time, enabling trend analysis and better policy decisions.
Data gaps and indicators
Current datasets often vary in scope and resolution, limiting cross-country comparisons. Key indicators include particle abundance by size class, polymer type, and mass concentration, as well as habitat-specific concentrations. Establishing baseline data and long-term datasets is crucial for tracking progress.
Global monitoring initiatives
Global efforts aim to harmonize measurement and reporting. Initiatives involve international organizations, research networks, and collaborations that pool data to create comprehensive assessments of microplastic distribution, fate, and effects. These programs support evidence-based action and policy alignment across borders.
Mitigation and policy
Waste management improvements
Reducing microplastic inputs begins with stronger waste management: preventing pellet loss during handling, improving recycling infrastructure, and upgrading stormwater filtration. Cleaner production and end-of-life management for plastics help minimize environmental release at source.
Product design and bans
Design changes can reduce shedding and environmental release. Bans or phase-outs of microbeads, improved textile manufacturing, and shifting away from single-use plastics lessen the amount of microplastics entering the environment. Product stewardship encourages manufacturers to consider end-of-life impacts during the design phase.
Policy instruments and international cooperation
Policy tools include extended producer responsibility, economic incentives to reduce plastic waste, and robust monitoring requirements. International cooperation supports data sharing, harmonized standards, and coordinated action, which is essential given the transboundary nature of microplastics.
Public awareness and education
Education programs
Education at schools and communities raises awareness of plastic pollution and microplastics. Clear messaging about how individual choices affect pollution, and how to reduce personal footprint, helps empower people to take action in daily life.
Citizen science and community engagement
Community projects—such as beach cleanups and citizen-led sampling—enhance data collection and public engagement. Citizen science democratizes monitoring, increases transparency, and builds local stewardship around local water bodies and soils.
Trusted Source Insight
Key UNESCO takeaway and implications
UNESCO emphasizes that plastic pollution, including microplastics, represents a global environmental threat that requires coordinated action across sectors and borders. Robust monitoring, standardized methodologies, and data sharing are essential, as is integrating scientific findings into policy. Education and public awareness are central levers for change, and there is a call for equitable access to data and capacity building for developing countries. For further context and foundational analysis, access the UNESCO resource here: https://unesdoc.unesco.org.