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Impact of mangrove forest structure and landscape on macroplastics capture

Paolo Cappa, Mark Walton, Maria Kristina O. Paler, Evelyn B. Taboada, Jan Geert Hiddink, Martin W. Skov

2023Marine Pollution Bulletin27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Complex networks of above-ground roots and trunks make mangrove forests trap plastic litter. We tested how macroplastics relate to tree biomass, root abundance, mangrove geomorphology and river mouth proximity, surveying landward and seaward margins of seven forests in the Philippines, a global hotspot for marine plastic pollution. Macroplastics were abundant (mean ± s.e.: 1.1 ± 0.22 items m−2; range: 0.05 ± 0.05 to 3.79 ± 1.91), greatest at the landward zone (mean ± s.e.: 1.60 ± 0.41 m−2) and dominated by land-derived items (sachets, bags). Plastic abundance and weight increased with proximity to river mouths, with root abundance predicting plastic litter surface area (i.e., the cumulative sum of all the surface areas of each plastic element per plot). The study confirms rivers are a major pathway for marine plastic pollution, with mangrove roots are the biological attribute that regulate litter retention. The results suggest land-based waste management that prevent plastics entering rivers will reduce marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia.

Topics & Concepts

MangroveGeographyForestryEnvironmental scienceAgroforestryEcologyBiologyMicroplastics and Plastic PollutionCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsCoastal Management and Development
Impact of mangrove forest structure and landscape on macroplastics capture | Litcius