Microplastic Dispersal in Lake Ontario Driven by Lagrangian Coherent Structures

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Abstract

The spatial distribution of microplastics in large bodies of water like Lake Ontario depends on the lake's hidden flow patterns. By analyzing a time series of offshore circulation and employing backward Finite-Time Lyapunov Exponent (FTLE) fields along with Lagrangian particle tracking, we find correlations between the Earth's rotation, basin-wide internal waves, and the localized fate of microplastic pollution. Our findings reveal two distinct regimes in pollution transport: a high-speed transport "Southern Conveyor Belt" that acts as a regional transport of plastics, and a low-speed or diffusive spread "Toronto Trap" that serves as a local accumulator of urban waste. Furthermore, Mean Square Displacement (MSD) analysis shows three distinct kinematic transport regimes governing this dispersal: an early-time diffusive regime, an intermediate super-ballistic regime driven by rapid spatial acceleration and shear dispersion into Lagrangian Coherent Structures (LCS), and a late-time ballistic regime reflecting steady advection. This quantitative analysis confirms that particles released from southern sources travel significantly farther distances overall, reinforcing the contrast between the high-transport southern coastal jet and the low-transport northwestern retention zones.

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