Message in a bottle: Assessing the sources and origins of beach litter to tackle marine pollution

被引:0
|
作者
Ryan, Peter G. [1 ]
Weideman, Eleanor A. [1 ]
Perold, Vonica [1 ]
Hofmeyr, Greg [2 ,3 ]
Connan, Maelle [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cape Town, DST NRF Ctr Excellence, FitzPatrick Inst African Ornithol, ZA-7701 Rondebosch, South Africa
[2] Port Elizabeth Museum Bayworld, ZA-6013 Port Elizabeth, South Africa
[3] Nelson Mandela Univ, Inst Coastal & Marine Res, Dept Zool, Marine Apex Predator Res Unit, ZA-6031 Port Elizabeth, South Africa
关键词
Plastic pollution; Local sources; Dumping at sea; Long-distance drift; Atlantic Ocean; Indian Ocean; PLASTIC DEBRIS; ACCUMULATION; OCEAN; USERS; SEA;
D O I
10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117729
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Beaches are key attractions for tourism and recreation, and considerable effort is made to keep beaches clean, yet many beaches still have substantial litter loads. Lasting solutions to reduce the amounts of marine litter require an understanding of litter sources. We collected bottles and other single-use containers at 32 sites around the South African coast to infer their sources based on their age and country of manufacture. Bottle densities varied greatly among beaches (8-450 bottles.km- 1), depending on proximity to local urban centres and beach cleaning frequency. Most bottles were plastic, despite well-developed recycling initiatives for PET and HDPE bottles in South Africa. Street litter was dominated by bottles made in South Africa (99%), but foreign-manufactured bottles comprised up to 74% of bottles at some beaches, with an increase from urban (4%) through semiurban (24%) to remote beaches (45%). Most foreign bottles were PET drink bottles from China and other Asian countries, followed by South America and Europe, with little regional variation in the contribution from these sources. This fact, coupled with their recent manufacture dates (mainly <2 years old), indicates that most foreign PET drink bottles are dumped illegally from ships. By comparison, foreign HDPE bottles were more common along the southeast coast of South Africa than along the west coast, consistent with many of these bottles arriving by long-distance drift across the Indian Ocean from southeast Asia. The most common country of origin for these bottles was Indonesia, and most newly-arrived HDPE bottles were 4-6 years old. To tackle beach litter in South Africa we need to greatly reduce plastic leakage from land-based sources, both locally and in southeast Asia, as well as improve measures to prevent the illegal dumping of plastics and other persistent wastes from ships.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 13 条
  • [1] Message in a bottle: Assessing the sources and origins of beach litter to tackle marine pollution
    Ryan, Peter G.
    Weideman, Eleanor A.
    Perold, Vonica
    Hofmeyr, Greg
    Connan, Maëlle
    [J]. Environmental Pollution, 2021, 288
  • [2] A preliminary investigation of marine litter pollution along Mandvi beach, Kachchh, Gujarat
    Behera, Durga Prasad
    Kolandhasamy, Prabhu
    Sigamani, Sivaraj
    Devi, Lakshmi Prabha
    Ibrahim, Yusof Shuaib
    [J]. MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2021, 165 (165)
  • [3] Marine litter pollution in a subantarctic beach of the Strait of Magellan, Punta Arenas, Chile
    Salinas, Carla Ximena
    Palacios, Elaine
    Pozo, Karla
    Torres, Mariett
    Rebolledo, Lorena
    Gomez, Victoria
    Rondon, Rodolfo
    de la Maza, Ignacia
    Galban, Cristobal
    [J]. MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2024, 202
  • [4] Sources and management of marine litter pollution along the Bay of Bengal coast of Bangladesh
    Islam, Md. Saiful
    Phoungthong, Khamphe
    Islam, Abu Reza Md. Towfiqul
    Ali, Mir Mohammad
    Ismail, Zulhilmi
    Shahid, Shamsuddin
    Kabir, Md. Humayun
    Idris, Abubakr M.
    [J]. MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2022, 185
  • [5] Bottle with a message: The role of story writing as an engagement tool to explore children's perceptions of marine plastic litter
    Praet, Estelle
    Baeza-Alvarez, Jostein
    De Veer, Diamela
    Holtmann-Ahumada, Geraldine
    Jones, Jen S.
    Langford, Sarah
    Dearte, Jessica Michel
    Schofield, John
    Thiel, Martin
    Wyles, Kayleigh J.
    [J]. MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2023, 186
  • [6] A multi-criteria evaluation system for marine litter pollution based on statistical analyses of OSPAR beach litter monitoring time series
    Schulz, Marcus
    Neumann, Daniel
    Fleet, David M.
    Matthies, Michael
    [J]. MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2013, 92 : 61 - 70
  • [7] Beach showers as sources of contamination for sunscreen pollution in marine protected areas and areas of intensive beach tourism in Hawaii, USA
    Downs, C. A.
    Diaz-Cruz, M. Silvia
    White, William T.
    Rice, Marc
    Jim, Laura
    Punihaole, Cindi
    Dant, Mendy
    Gautam, Krishna
    Woodley, Cheryl M.
    Walsh, Kahelelani O.
    Perry, Jenna
    Downs, Evelyn M.
    Bishop, Lisa
    Garg, Achal
    King, Kelly
    Paltin, Tamara
    McKinley, Ellen B.
    Beers, Axel I.
    Anbumani, Sadasivam
    Bagshaw, Jeff
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, 2022, 438
  • [8] Marine litter from beach-based sources: Case study of an Eastern Mediterranean coastal town
    Portman, Michelle E.
    Brennan, Ruth E.
    [J]. WASTE MANAGEMENT, 2017, 69 : 535 - 544
  • [9] Application of denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) for assessing fecal pollution sources at a recreational beach
    Esseili, M. A.
    Kassem, I. I.
    Lis, J.
    Sigler, V.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF WATER AND HEALTH, 2014, 12 (04) : 846 - 857
  • [10] Beach pollution from marine litter: Analysis with the DPSIR framework (driver, pressure, state, impact, response) in Tuscany, Italy
    Federigi, Ileana
    Balestri, Elena
    Castelli, Alberto
    De Battisti, Davide
    Maltagliati, Ferruccio
    Menicagli, Virginia
    Verani, Marco
    Lardicci, Claudio
    Carducci, Annalaura
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2022, 143