Marine litter on the beaches of the Kanyakumari, Southern India: An assessment of their abundance and pollution indices

The problem of marine litter is increasing along the Indian coast. For conducting a baseline study to identify and assess the abundance, clean-coast index (CCI), and plastics abundance index (PAI) of marine litter were calculated on the beaches of Kanyakumari, Southern India. A total of 11,439 marin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Marine pollution bulletin 2023-01, Vol.186, p.114443-114443, Article 114443
Hauptverfasser: Perumal, Karthikeyan, Muthuramalingam, Subagunasekar, Chellaiyan, Stella
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The problem of marine litter is increasing along the Indian coast. For conducting a baseline study to identify and assess the abundance, clean-coast index (CCI), and plastics abundance index (PAI) of marine litter were calculated on the beaches of Kanyakumari, Southern India. A total of 11,439 marine litter items were collected and classified into 33 groups along the 7 beaches of Kanyakumari. From the results, plastics were the most abundant items (65.08 %) followed by foam (21.93 %), along with cloths (4.59 %), rubber (3.09 %), papers (2.26 %), glass (2.16 %), metal (0.38 %), wood (0.26 %), and others (0.26 %). The average CCI value (27.24) indicates that all beaches are ‘extremely dirty’; however, the PAI average value (4.37) indicates ‘high abundance’. About 96.87 % of the marine litter originates from the land-based sources. This study provides an interpretive framework for further plastic pollution assessment, which could lead to a better marine litter management on Indian beaches. •11,439 marine litter items, and their density of 6.71 items/m2 were identified.•Plastic litter with an average density of 4.37 items/m2, was the most abundant.•The average value of CCI (27.24) indicates the beaches were ‘extremely dirty’.•The PAI (71.43 %) confirmed that five beaches have ‘high abundance’.
ISSN:0025-326X
1879-3363
DOI:10.1016/j.marpolbul.2022.114443