Spatiotemporal variations in anthropogenic marine litter pollution along the northeast beaches of India
Marine litter is widely distributed in marine environments and has been a severe concern worldwide, due to the disposal of waste from diverse sources. The severity of this threat has garnered increasing attention in India over the last decade, but the full consequences of this pollution are yet to b...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental pollution (1987) 2021-07, Vol.280, p.116954, Article 116954 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Marine litter is widely distributed in marine environments and has been a severe concern worldwide, due to the disposal of waste from diverse sources. The severity of this threat has garnered increasing attention in India over the last decade, but the full consequences of this pollution are yet to be quantified. To estimate the spatiotemporal distribution, composition and beach quality of marine litter pollution, 17 beaches along the Hooghly estuary, a part of the Gangetic delta was studied. Marine litter was collected from 100 m long transects during two seasons (monsoon and post-monsoon). The OSPAR monitoring standard was applied to the 16,597 litter items collected, then grouped under 6 types and 44 categories. In terms of number, litter abundance was higher during monsoon (1.10 ± 0.39 items/m2) than that of post-monsoon (0.86 ± 0.32 items/m2). Most of the beaches were categorized as low cleanliness as computed by the general index and clean coast index and the good for the pellet pollution index. Hazardous litter constituted 6.5% of the total collected litter items. The model prediction revealed that the influence of high discharge from Hooghly, Rasulpur and Subarnarekha River carried enormous anthropogenic litter to the northeast beaches. The litter flux decreases with an increase in distance from the shore, and act as a sink to the sea-floor. The results denote that the distribution and typology of marine litter were representatives of household, tourism and fishing, which in turn highlights the need for better regional litter management measures. Suggested management practices include source reduction, mitigation, management of beach environment and change in littering behaviour through environmental education.
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•The abundance/composition of marine litter was investigated in 17 beaches during two seasons.•Plastic (84.6%) is the prime component of marine litter in the lower reaches of the Ganges basin.•Studied beaches are not at risk from resin pellets and hazardous litter items.•Model predicts that the northeast beaches of India act as sinks for marine litter.•Appropriate strategies for regional marine litter management were suggested. |
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ISSN: | 0269-7491 1873-6424 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.116954 |