Marine litter and climate change: Inextricably connected threats to the world's oceans

The global issues of climate change and marine litter are interlinked and understanding these connections is key to managing their combined risks to marine biodiversity and ultimately society. For example, fossil fuel-based plastics cause direct emissions of greenhouse gases and therefore are an imp...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2022-09, Vol.837, p.155709-155709, Article 155709
Hauptverfasser: Lincoln, Susana, Andrews, Barnaby, Birchenough, Silvana N.R., Chowdhury, Piyali, Engelhard, Georg H., Harrod, Olivia, Pinnegar, John K., Townhill, Bryony L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The global issues of climate change and marine litter are interlinked and understanding these connections is key to managing their combined risks to marine biodiversity and ultimately society. For example, fossil fuel-based plastics cause direct emissions of greenhouse gases and therefore are an important contributing factor to climate change, while other impacts of plastics can manifest as alterations in key species and habitats in coastal and marine environments. Marine litter is acknowledged as a threat multiplier that acts with other stressors such as climate change to cause far greater damage than if they occurred in isolation. On the other hand, while climate change can lead to increased inputs of litter into the marine environment, the presence of marine litter can also undermine the climate resilience of marine ecosystems. There is increasing evidence that that climate change and marine litter are inextricably linked, although these interactions and the resulting effects vary widely across oceanic regions and depend on the particular characteristics of specific marine environments. Ecosystem resilience approaches, that integrate climate change with other local stressors, offer a suitable framework to incorporate the consideration of marine litter where that is deemed to be a risk, and to steer, coordinate and prioritise research and monitoring, as well as management, policy, planning and action to effectively tackle the combined risks and impacts from climate change and marine litter. [Display omitted] •Climate change influences sources and pathways of global marine litter.•Climate change influences breakdown of marine litter.•Climate change and litter contribute to the spread of non-native species.•Marine litter undermines the climate resilience of marine ecosystems.•Ecosystem resilience approaches can be used to guide research and policy.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.155709