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  • These are plankton.

  • And those bright green specks inside their bodies are showing us what they're eating.

  • It's not food.

  • Those are tiny pieces of...plastic.

  • We hear a lot about pollution from single use plastic items,

  • like plastic straws and shopping bags that are clogging marine habitats.

  • Although these large pieces of plastic contribute the most to the overall mass of plastic polluting oceans,

  • they count for a small share of the total number of plastic particles.

  • That's because most of the plastic pieces in the oceans don't look like this.

  • They're tiny particles that look like this, and where they're coming from might surprise you.

  • Modern fibers, alone or in blends with natural fibers, brought new innovations in cool, crisp comfortable clothes.”

  • Back in the 1940s, fabrics like nylon, acrylic and rayon-- all made from plastic -- became really popular.

  • These synthetic clothes were cheap to produce, comfortable to wear,

  • and as more people have bought clothes for athletics and leisure,

  • companies have been making more clothes out of plastic.

  • By 2010, over half of all the fabric in our clothing was made from synthetic fibers.

  • In the meantime, marine scientists noticed that habitats were being polluted with tiny pieces of plastic calledmicroplastics”.

  • These are objects are smaller than 5 millimeters,

  • and can be anything from tiny shards broken off larger items to microbeads developed for use in cosmetic products.

  • Microplastics are found in marine habitats everywhere on Earth.

  • Concentrations of microplastics have been found on coastal beaches in South Africa,

  • The Great Lakes of North America, rivers in Britain,

  • and at the bottom of an oceanic trench near Russia.

  • Turns out, a large share of those microplastics are microfibers:

  • tiny strands of plastic, and they're coming from our laundry.

  • Looking at this fleece jacket up close,

  • you can see that its fuzzy material is actually a fabric made from tiny strands of plastic woven together.

  • When we wash a synthetic piece of clothing,

  • like this fleece, the fabric is pulled loose and tiny microfibers fall out.

  • Scientists actually tested three types of synthetic clothing to see which types shed the most using a washing machine fitted with a special filter.

  • They determined that acrylic shed the most microfibers.

  • Over 700,000 on the first wash alone.

  • And even though fiber loss goes down after the first wash, the sheer number of people doing laundry adds up,

  • making microfibers a huge contributor to the nearly five trillion pieces of microplastics that are floating around the world's oceans.

  • In most dryers there's a mesh screen to catch lint, but washing machines typically don't have a filter.

  • So everything that falls off our clothes is flushed down the drain.

  • From there, microfibers might move through a sewage treatment plant,

  • but the filters are often too large to stop them from passing through and flowing to a discharge point at a nearby marine habitat.

  • Once they reach the ocean, microfibers are consumed by plankton and other filter feeders that eat debris falling to the seafloor.

  • And then the plastic starts making its way up the food chain,

  • passed on by predators feeding on organisms that have ingested microfibers.

  • Eventually, it reaches us.

  • Plastic enters human bodies when we eat seafood containing microfibers.

  • Like these, which scientists found in a piece of fish they bought at a seafood market.

  • So, what can be done?

  • Switching to other materials isn't feasible because synthetic clothes -- they're cheap.

  • A lot cheaper than making apparel with other fabrics.

  • But what you can do is add a filter to your washing machine that would catch microfibers falling off when you do your laundry.

  • Problem is, those are pretty expensive,

  • So another solution is using filter bags that trap microfibers before they fall off into the wash when you do your laundry.

  • But the most effective change of all would just be buying fewer synthetic clothes,

  • or at least, washing them less often.

  • And what less often means...

  • that's up to you.

  • If you've gotten to this point in the video,

  • you're probably the kind of person who would be curious in learning about something like astronomy.

  • You know, what's out there in case we need to abandon this plastic-filled ship of our own making.

  • Brilliant is a problem solving website that teaches you how to think like a scientist.

  • They have courses on everything from calculus to astronomy and daily problems in math and science.

  • To learn more about Brilliant, go to Brilliant.org/Vox and sign up for free.

  • The first 200 people that go to that link will get 20% off the annual premium subscription.

  • So you can view all the daily problems and unlock all the courses.

  • Brilliant doesn't directly impact our editorial, but their support makes videos like this one possible.

  • So go check them out and thanks for watching!

These are plankton.

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