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Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2023

Ben Williams*
Affiliation:
Air Quality Management Resource Centre, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK Biospheric Microplastics Research Cluster, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK
Laura De Vito
Affiliation:
Air Quality Management Resource Centre, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK
Ana M. Sardo
Affiliation:
Air Quality Management Resource Centre, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK Science Communication Unit, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK
Kirsty Pringle
Affiliation:
Software Sustainability Institute, Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
Mark Hansen
Affiliation:
Centre for Machine Vision, Bristol Robotics Laboratory, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK
Mark Taylor
Affiliation:
School of Design, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
Kathryn Lamb-Riddell
Affiliation:
Institute of Bio-Sensing Technology, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK
Sophie Laggan
Affiliation:
Air Quality Management Resource Centre, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK Science Communication Unit, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK
Tim Cox
Affiliation:
Institute of Bio-Sensing Technology, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK
Freya Radford
Affiliation:
Air Quality Management Resource Centre, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK Biospheric Microplastics Research Cluster, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK
Enda T. Hayes
Affiliation:
Air Quality Management Resource Centre, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK Biospheric Microplastics Research Cluster, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK
*
Corresponding author: Ben Williams; Email: Ben3.williams@uwe.ac.uk
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Abstract

Microplastics are ubiquitous in our environment but their presence in air is less well understood. Homes are likely a key source of airborne microplastics and microfibres to the environment owing to the frequent use and storage of plastics and textiles within them. Studying their presence, concentration and distribution in these environments is difficult without the participation of citizens due to accessibility challenges. Few studies have examined the intricacies of the prevalence of indoor microplastics and microfibres or the link between indoor exposure and behavioural and regulatory approaches that could reduce their concentrations. The application of a quintuple innovation helix framework, within which a co-creative citizen science research methodology is applied, provides an opportunity for citizens to shape the scientific method, ensuring that methods are accessible and appropriate for widespread use and designed by the citizen, for the citizen. Exploring behaviours and motivations in plastic and textile use by citizens with industry may reduce the generation of these particles. Future studies should consider the importance of citizen inclusion when designing research strategies for measuring and reducing microplastic concentrations in homes, enabling a nuanced understanding of their generation and distribution and facilitating the development of appropriate behavioural, industrial and regulatory messaging and mitigative measures.

Information

Type
Perspective
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Author comment: Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research — R0/PR1

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Review: Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research — R0/PR2

Conflict of interest statement

I am the co-inventor and CEO of Cora Ball, a consumer solution to microfiber pollution from washing machines.

Comments

General: This is an important and evolving topic and an appropriate avenue to pursue knowledge - citizen scientists in their own homes! This perspective paper is, in my opinion, well-written defining the problem of acquiring large data sets pertaining to airborne microplastics in people’s homes and presenting the evidence for a viable suggestion of a framework to solve that problem.

My only concern is that I think this paper should (briefly) acknowledge that potential challenges in the execution of this vision and particular use of citizen science have to do with contamination control and having masses and masses of samples that need to be analyzed (and to what level does this team believe that needs to happen - to the material level for every single microparticle?). As of the writing of this paper, I am not aware of any published works that spell out the details to accomplish a robust end result for in-home airborne sampling by the homeowner. Lines 114-118 recognize that the tools currently used by environmental scientists to measure airborne microplastics are expensive. And if that is the point, I feel like another sentence making the call for something more accessible is appropriate here to make this need crystal clear and perhaps inspire innovation.

Additionally, while more and more techniques to analyze the samples themselves are being developed with various levels of cost, time and specialized skill requirements, here, too, is a place that I feel needs acknowledging. If nothing else, but as a statement that appropriate techniques for a citizen science model exist or as a call for those methods to be developed.

On the whole, however, I appreciate and support this paper’s premise, evidence, flow and conclusion.

Line by line:

26. (Typo) He should be “the”

72. I recommend acknowledging that washing and drying/laundering clothing and home textiles is a recognized source with clear evidence (at minimum when investigating the effluent/emissions from laundry machines). This sentence as written, without a qualifier, could be misleading.

161. Change “them” to citizens or community members (or something similar).

Review: Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research — R0/PR3

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

General comments

This manuscript raises a very important issue and is certainly worth of publication. However, I believe that the argument it presents is not strong enough, and the organisation of the text not focussed enough, for publication yet. The purpose of the manuscript is not set out clearly in the introduction; the manuscripts main points are not clearly laid out until the final section; and there is assumed knowledge throughout, particularly in the second section which introduces the recommended approach but does not clearly describe it or how it can be applied to this field. The narrative of the manuscript needs tightening up to make the most of the valid points that underpin the work’s argument.

Some very long sentences including, but not limited to, L63-67 and L100-103 and 104-107

There are unspecified topics in sentences (e.g. use of ‘that environment’ in L52-53 assumes reader will know this refers to the marine environment). This style might be less accessible for those who do not have English as a first / fluent language.

Consider using, or at least acknowledging, the term ‘community science’, rather than/alongside ‘citizen science’. There is an ongoing debate about these two terms and the definition of community science varies, however, the benefits you highlight rely on recognising the diversity within society and the use of ‘citizen science’ may present some conflict with this term to be exclusionary of this diversity. Moreover, with specific reference to your call for ‘citizen science’ for textiles fibre pollution and the behaviours of textile owners, there is work showing that the way individuals care for and maintain their clothing varies geographically and culturally (e.g. Laitala et al. 2020).

Laitala, K., Klepp, I.G., Kettlewell, R. and Wiedemann, S., 2020. Laundry care regimes: Do the practices of keeping clothes clean have different environmental impacts based on the fibre content? Sustainability, 12(18), p.7537.

Pre-Intro

L26 – typo ‘the’, not ‘he’?

L28 – typo ‘not’, not ‘no’?

Introduction

L51-52 – missing words? Sentences does not flow.

L64-66 – in what context? Were these textile factory workers, general members of the public, or somewhere in between?

Define Microplastic and microfibre at their first use

L83-84: An overstatement. This one study provides an example, but the findings are not ‘typical’ of all loads. Suggest language is softened.

By the end of the first section, I am not sure what the article is about. At least one paragraph, even if short, is needed to focus the reader on the manuscript’s purpose.

Section 2

L87 - Two section 1s

L98 – Please define what a quintuple innovation helix framework is. This knowledge is currently assumed.

This section does not address its title. It alludes to the benefits of involving citizen scientists in microplastic research (though I feel this point could be made stronger), but makes no clear reference to the ‘co-creation’ of research with citizen scientists, or the need for it.

Section 3

L120 – should be section 3

L139-153 – This paragraph seems to me to be one of the key points of the manuscript. The statements it makes are really important, but there is not enough made of them, and they come to late. This paragraph could be expanded on and considerably, and its sentiment introduced throughout the manuscript.

L41-46 – Could you offer your own definition within this context?

L54-65 – As with the previous paragraph, this is a very important argument and more could be made of it. However, I would like to see reference to academic literature to support this paragraph. The paragraph details important justifications for citizen science. However, some still object to the use of citizen science, and so it is important that its justification is well-reasoned. Without reference to literature, this paragraph reads as an opinion, but there is evidence to support the statements within it that could be cited.

- To do this might require the paragraph to be less microplastic-specific (e.g. in L58)

Conclusion

L166 – should be section 4

This conclusion could be stronger. In the last sentence, more explicit reference should be made to <b>how </b> citizen science can address the point made in the sentence it follows.

Recommendation: Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research — R0/PR4

Comments

Dear Author

We are delighted to accept this article with the caveat that the amendments suggested by the reviewers are completed. The 2nd reviewer has suggested some significant changes in structure and writing style/strength of argument; please address these appropriately. Thank you again for submitting for publication and we look forward to your revised manuscript.

Decision: Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research — R0/PR5

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research — R1/PR6

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Review: Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research — R1/PR7

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

Thank you for your revisions. I hope this paper inspires action by both researchers and citizen/community scientists.

Recommendation: Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research — R1/PR8

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: Embedding citizens within airborne microplastic and microfibre research — R1/PR9

Comments

No accompanying comment.