Investigating Sources of Marine Litter and Developing Coping Strategies in Scuba Diving Spots in Taiwan

Marine debris and floating marine debris issues have recently become a matter of great concern. The present study selected Kenting National Park and Northeast Cape and Yilan Coast National Scenic Area as the survey areas, where most of the popular scuba diving spots in Taiwan are located, to identif...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2022-05, Vol.14 (9), p.5726
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Ping-I, Ku, Gordon Chih-Ming, Lin, Hsiao-Hsien, Hsu, Chin-Hsien, Chi, Hung-Chih, Chen, Yi-Ching
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container_end_page
container_issue 9
container_start_page 5726
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 14
creator Lin, Ping-I
Ku, Gordon Chih-Ming
Lin, Hsiao-Hsien
Hsu, Chin-Hsien
Chi, Hung-Chih
Chen, Yi-Ching
description Marine debris and floating marine debris issues have recently become a matter of great concern. The present study selected Kenting National Park and Northeast Cape and Yilan Coast National Scenic Area as the survey areas, where most of the popular scuba diving spots in Taiwan are located, to identify the volume, types, and sources of marine litter. The findings could be regarded as the foundation for future study and the suggestions for managerial strategies. The visual and line transect methods were used to conduct fourteen investigations of marine litter in four scuba diving spots from June 2020 to November 2020. Descriptive analysis and the chi-square test were used to analyze the volume, types, and sources of marine litter, as well as the different distributions under diverse locations, terrains, season, and tides. The results indicate that 2841 pieces of marine litter are identified, including 1786 (63%) plastic containers, 312 (11%) plastic bags, 254 (9%) disposable tableware for take-out beverages, 285 (10%) other materials, 72 (2%) cigarette butts, and 30 (1%) fishery and recreational fishing pieces. Different seasons, locations, and tides cause a significantly different marine litter distribution among these areas. The findings are expected to promote source reduction, develop shore and underwater cleaning proposals, and enhance marine protection education.
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The present study selected Kenting National Park and Northeast Cape and Yilan Coast National Scenic Area as the survey areas, where most of the popular scuba diving spots in Taiwan are located, to identify the volume, types, and sources of marine litter. The findings could be regarded as the foundation for future study and the suggestions for managerial strategies. The visual and line transect methods were used to conduct fourteen investigations of marine litter in four scuba diving spots from June 2020 to November 2020. Descriptive analysis and the chi-square test were used to analyze the volume, types, and sources of marine litter, as well as the different distributions under diverse locations, terrains, season, and tides. The results indicate that 2841 pieces of marine litter are identified, including 1786 (63%) plastic containers, 312 (11%) plastic bags, 254 (9%) disposable tableware for take-out beverages, 285 (10%) other materials, 72 (2%) cigarette butts, and 30 (1%) fishery and recreational fishing pieces. Different seasons, locations, and tides cause a significantly different marine litter distribution among these areas. 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subjects Advocacy
Beverages
Chi-square test
Climate change
Coasts
Consumption
Diving
Environmental protection
Fisheries
Fishing equipment
Marine conservation
Marine debris
National parks
National scenic areas
Pollution
Scenic areas
Scuba diving
Sport fishing
Statistical tests
Tableware
Tides
Underwater
title Investigating Sources of Marine Litter and Developing Coping Strategies in Scuba Diving Spots in Taiwan
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