DETERMINING THE ACCUMULATION OF MICROPLASTICS IN LAKE ICE A Case Study of Lake Följesjön, Sweden
Abstract
Microplastics are an emerging pollutant of global concern due to their persistence, widespread
distribution, and potential ecological impacts. While the presence of microplastics in marine
environments has been extensively studied, knowledge about their accumulation and behavior
in freshwater systems, particularly in seasonally ice-covered lakes, remains limited. This thesis
investigates the presence, concentration, and characteristics of microplastics in lake ice and
water from Lake Följesjön, Sweden, during the winter season of 2024/2025. The results are
compared to water samples collected from the same lake during the summer of 2024 to assess
seasonal variation and the role of lake ice as a potential sink and source for microplastics.
Samples of lake ice, water under the ice, and summer surface water were collected and
processed using a combination of size-fractionated sieving, chemical digestion (10% KOH), oil
extraction, and μ-Raman spectroscopy for particle identification. Microplastics were detected
in all sample types, with concentrations ranging from 51,32 MP/L in the ice sample to 333,33
MP/L for the water under the ice sample. The combined winter concentration (384,65 MP/L)
was nearly double that of the total summer concentration (200,00 MP/L), indicating seasonal
accumulation. Approximately 13% of the total winter microplastic concentration was
incorporated into the ice, suggesting that most particles remain suspended in the water column
during ice-covered periods.
Particle morphology analysis showed a predominance of small particles with low circularity
across all samples. Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) was the most frequently identified polymer in
limited range μ-Raman analyses; however, full spectrum analysis revealed a shift toward
polyethylene (PE) and uncategorized plastics (UNC), highlighting the importance of spectral
range in accurate identification.
These findings suggest that lake ice plays a limited but measurable role in microplastic storage
and may contribute to seasonal redistribution of microplastics upon melting. The study
contributes new knowledge to the underrepresented field of microplastics in seasonally icecovered
freshwater lakes and emphasizes the need to better understand microplastic dynamics
in ice-covered environments.
Degree
Student essay