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Litter behaviour on Mediterranean cobble beaches, SE Spain

Francisco Asensio-Montesinos, Giorgio Anfuso, A.T. Williams, Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro

2021Marine Pollution Bulletin31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite the large research effort on reporting quantities of coastal litter, the dynamics of this litter is not yet sufficiently understood. Litter inputs in five cobble beaches located in the Mediterranean (Spain) were studied over three months during winter by biweekly litter tagging. Plastic represented the dominant material that reached the beaches (77%). In remote and narrow beaches, storms constituted the main driver in litter dynamics, favouring the accumulation of floating items such as plastic bottles and wood fragments as well as the largest but contrasting effects, increasing litter inputs and outputs from the beach, respectively. In rural beaches, beach users, mainly fisher people, but also tourists, contributed to a notable input of litter to the beach. Burial and exhumation of litter were reported as common occurring processes. Better management actions are required to improve beach environmental quality.

Topics & Concepts

CobbleLitterMediterranean climateMarine debrisEnvironmental scienceStormPlageEcologyHydrology (agriculture)FisheryOceanographyShoreBiologyHabitatGeologyDebrisGeotechnical engineeringMicroplastics and Plastic PollutionMarine Biology and Environmental ChemistryRecycling and Waste Management Techniques
Litter behaviour on Mediterranean cobble beaches, SE Spain | Litcius