1. Proximity to coast and major rivers influence the density of floating microplastics and other litter in east African coastal waters.
- Author
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Weideman, Eleanor A., Perold, Vonica, Donnarumma, Vincenzo, Suaria, Giuseppe, and Ryan, Peter G.
- Subjects
MARINE debris ,PLASTIC marine debris ,TERRITORIAL waters ,SOLID waste management ,COASTS ,MICROPLASTICS ,METROPOLIS ,WATER sampling - Abstract
Floating anthropogenic litter occurs in all ocean basins, yet little is known about their distribution and abundance in the coastal waters off east Africa. Neuston net and bulk water sampling shows that meso- and micro-litter (8567 ± 19,684 items∙km
−2 , 44 ± 195 g∙km−2 ) and microfibres (2.4 ± 2.6 fibres∙L−1 ) are pervasive pollutants off the coasts of Tanzania and northern Mozambique, with higher litter loads off Tanzania. Densities of meso- and micro-litter at the start of the rainy season were greater close to the coast and to major river mouths, suggesting that much litter likely originates on land. However, the mass of litter increased with distance from the six major coastal cities. By number, 95% of meso- and micro-litter was plastic, but only 6% of microfibres. Our results highlight the need to reduce plastic use and improve solid waste management in the region. • Higher litter and fibre densities off Tanzania than Mozambique. • Higher litter densities close to river mouths and coast. • Most (95 %) of meso- and micro-litter items were plastic. • Only 6 % of microfibres were synthetic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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