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Marine Debris in the Beilun Estuary Mangrove Forest: Monitoring, Assessment and Implications. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A modified method for investigating marine debris in mangrove forests was implemented in the Beilun Estuary, assessing the types, sources, and quantities of debris, mainly from land-based human activities.
  • Over 90% of debris was found to originate from land, with plastics making up more than 60% of the total weight, indicating a significant impact on the environment.
  • The study offers practical insights for monitoring marine debris and highlights the role of mangroves as natural barriers against larger debris, aiming to support pollution control and conservation efforts in the region.

Article Abstract

A modified approach for marine debris investigation in mangrove forests is developed, including some practical programs, viz., sampling location, time, area, materials, size and sources data processing. The marine debris method was practiced in the Beilun Estuary mangrove forest region in Fangchenggang in 2019, viz., the debris items were classified, counted, weighed and recorded, and the marine debris pollution was assessed to understand the impact of human activities. The results show that the mass density is 21.123 (2.355~51.760) g/m, and more than 90% came from the land-based and human activities. More than 60% of the total debris weights are plastics, followed by fabrics (17.91%) and Styrofoam (10.07%); the big-size and oversize debris account for 76.41% and 13.33%, respectively. The quantity density is 0.163 (0.013~0.420) item/m, and ~95% came from land-based human activities. More than 75% of the total debris items were plastics, followed by Styrofoam (14.36%), fabrics (4.10%) and glass (3.59%); the big-size, medium-size and oversize debris are 76.41%, 13.33% and 10.26%, respectively. The results suggest that mangrove forests are barriers for the medium-/big-size marine debris, acting as traps for marine debris. Our study provides recommendations and practical guidance for establishing programs to monitor and assess the distribution and abundance of marine debris. The results show that mangrove areas in the Beilun Estuary are filled with some plastic debris (plastics plus Styrofoam) and that the density and type at Zhushan and Rongshutou near the China-Vietnam border are more than those at Shijiao and Jiaodong. The results of this study are also expected to not only provide baseline data for the future assessment of Beilun Estuary mangroves but also to help China and Vietnam strengthen marine land-based pollution control and promote coastal wetland and mangrove conservation, marine species conservation and sustainable use.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8536081PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182010826DOI Listing

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