• Life's a beach: Finding trends in marine

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Tue Oct 19 21:30:42 2021
    Life's a beach: Finding trends in marine debris across Australia

    Date:
    October 19, 2021
    Source:
    University of New South Wales
    Summary:
    Ten years of citizen science data has informed a new study which
    found plastic dominates the rubbish found on Australian beaches.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Plastic is 84 per cent of all rubbish found across Australian beaches,
    a UNSW- led study based on one of the largest marine debris databases
    in the Southern Hemisphere has found.


    ==========================================================================
    More than 2000 organisations and 150,000 citizen scientists have
    participated in the Australian Marine Debris Initiative [AMDI] by sorting
    and tallying up marine debris they have collected since it was set up
    by the not-for-profit Tangaroa Blue Foundation in 2004.

    Now a study led by UNSW Science has filtered and analysed 10 years of
    the AMDI Database and created a national map of patterns in marine debris.

    The study found that almost half of all debris could be related to
    land-based sources [litter and dumping on land] and seven per cent to
    dumping at sea.

    But 42 per cent of debris could not be related definitively to a
    source due to the debris breaking down into smaller fragments, which the researchers say highlights the legacy of plastic left in our environment, continually fragmenting into smaller pieces until it is microplastics.

    The findings have been published in Science of The Total Environment.



    ==========================================================================
    "The AMDI Database contains entries of beach clean-ups across Australia,
    but the added value of this database is that volunteers take the time to categorise what they find, sorting and counting the amounts of plastic,
    glass, rubber, metal, paper and other items," study lead author and PhD candidate, Jordan Gacutan from UNSW Science's Centre for Marine Science
    and Innovation in the School of Biological, Earth and Environmental
    Sciences says.

    "We can combine this rich data over space and time to get patterns of
    the marine debris and plastic problem across Australia.

    "This study shows, with unprecedented resolution, the variation in debris
    items both regionally and across Australia." Study co-author and Dean
    of UNSW Science, Professor Emma Johnston, says very few environmental
    stresses are able to be measured on a national scale.

    "So the 150,000 citizen scientists who have contributed to this database
    are doing an amazing favour for Australia," Prof. Johnston says.



    ========================================================================== "Their passion for the environment gives us one of the few continental
    scale insights into the global marine problem." For the AMDI Database,
    the Tangaroa Blue Foundation developed a method of categorising and
    counting all the rubbish collected by a range of citizen scientists and
    partner organisations, from families to government campaigns.

    "We designed the methodology, host it and manage the database, but the
    data is owned by 150,000 people that have contributed to that database,"
    study co- author and Tangaroa Blue Foundation founder and chief executive officer Heidi Tait says.

    "This is the impact of working together and the results really highlight
    that one intervention isn't going to solve the plastics in our oceans
    issue, and one sector or one stakeholder group is not going to be able
    to solve it on their own either.

    "We need to collaborate and this network is a perfect example of
    partners who have achieved something quite monumental." The AMDI
    Database now has almost 20 million entries, but the UNSW study focused
    on the 10-year period from when the database registered beach clean-ups
    at a national level.

    Drawing patterns from items on the beach Ms Tait says the AMDI Database
    showed there was a very different marine debris signature at a regional
    scale.

    "The data shows that what we find in Cape York is completely different
    to what we find in Port Phillip Bay in Melbourne," she says.

    The UNSW study looked at the national picture, but also grouped its
    findings according to the six 'bioregions' the Australian government
    uses to manage our oceans and coasts.

    These are: North (Northern Territory to Cape York), North-west (WA);
    South-west (lower WA and SA); South-east (including Victoria and Tasmania)
    and Temperate east (mainly NSW) and Coral Sea/Great Barrier Reef Marine
    Park.

    Mr Gacutan says that by looking at what items were found on beaches,
    we can better understand the problem items and where they came from.

    "Some bioregions have a high amount of fishing debris, such as fishing
    floats and nets, while others have a bigger problem with littering,
    and you can identify these patterns through what items you find on these coastal clean- ups," he says.

    The South-east and South-west regions have higher amounts of fishing
    items, but on the other hand, the Temperate East had three times the
    proportion of cigarette butts, compared to the national average, which
    shows a problem with local litter, the study suggested.

    The study found about 40 per cent of all marine debris across Australia
    was from littering, particularly near capital cities where a lot of
    plastic ends up on the beach from stormwater drains.

    "On the other hand, although Cape York in Queensland had a huge amount
    of debris, most of it came from external sources, for example floats
    and plastic bottles that might have been dumped both at sea or floated
    from other countries." "We know that Cape York is very, very remote so
    the amount of plastic we're finding on beaches isn't contributed by the
    people living there," Mr Gacutan says.

    Ms Tait says that better evidence needs to be used to inform how we
    manage the growing marine debris problem.

    "We need to be really targeted and strategic in what changes are put in
    place to mitigate marine debris, and we need to measure and monitor to
    make sure we are actually solving the problem, that's where the data is
    going to be so critical moving forward," she says.

    Improving citizen science for management Dr Graeme Clark, senior author of
    the study and Senior Research Associate at UNSW, says the study focused
    on filtering the data to make sure that it was as accurate and reliable
    as possible before it was used.

    "One of the main concerns that people have with citizen science data
    is the quality, accuracy and reliability of the data that we're getting
    from these clean-ups," he says.

    "You do get a huge variability in the quality, for example some people
    might start cleaning the grassed area at a beach, or the car park;
    children collect differently from adults; and this really limits
    comparisons between sites.

    "We tried to maximise the quality of the data and control the sites that
    we looked at by really conservative filtering.

    "We only looked at sites that were sandy, ocean facing, and weren't
    modified by structures like seawalls and breakwaters." Dr Clark says
    that the methods presented by the UNSW team could impact how citizen
    science databases are used and improve how marine debris data is
    collected globally.

    "Improving the quality and rigour of citizen science data makes it easier
    to use in management and decision making," he says.

    "Citizen science datasets are powerful tools for marine debris monitoring
    and can help shape management plans to better tackle the problem of
    marine debris and plastic pollution at a localised level.

    Ms Tait says the most unique aspect of the AMDI Database is that it's
    based on a scalable model which identifies the source of the debris.

    "If you look at what's currently happening internationally with
    discussions around global treaties on plastic, nationally with the
    National Plastics Plan, and state government plans to address single-use plastics: how are we going to measure those to make sure that those
    policies are having impact?," she says.

    "For example, if a Global Treaty on Plastics is formalised through the
    United Nations, we should see the 95 per cent of international marine
    debris we find in Cape York decrease in the future if this treaty is successful.

    "This is a way to measure the impact of mitigation strategies
    that are put in place to see whether they're actually making a
    positive impact and reducing marine debris and litter at the source." ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    University_of_New_South_Wales. Original written by Diane Nazaroff. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Jordan Gacutan, Emma L. Johnston, Heidi Tait, Wally Smith, Graeme F.

    Clark. Continental patterns in marine debris revealed by a decade
    of citizen science. Science of The Total Environment, 2022; 807:
    150742 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.150742 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/10/211019110516.htm

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