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The missing sink - quantification, categorisation and sourcing of beached macro-debris in the Scottish Orkney Islands
journal contribution
posted on 2021-03-22, 23:54 authored by J Buckingham, Angela CapperAngela Capper, M Bell© 2020 Around the coastline of the UK, macro-debris has been observed in average densities of over 700 items per metre. Systematic beach-cleans were conducted at 35 sites around the Scottish Orkney Islands, in order to quantify and categorise the level of marine debris found there. Litter was collected from 100 m transects and categorised by its material, broad source (terrestrial or marine) and potential sector source. Variation between sites, and the relative contribution of pre-determined environmental variables in influencing said variation, were analysed using the “capscale” function for a canonical analysis of principle coordinates (CAP). 513 items/m were observed, (77% plastic), with “String/cord (<1cm diameter)” being the most abundant and widely distributed litter type. 47% of macro-debris was attributed to the fishing sector and < 10% to leisure, living and tourism-associated activities. Conversely, the unique regional hydrodynamics must be examined further, before the source of any given item can be categorically assigned.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)
History
Volume
157Start Page
1End Page
13eISSN
1879-3363ISSN
0025-326XLocation
EnglandPublisher
ElsevierPublisher DOI
Language
engPeer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
Acceptance Date
2020-06-06External Author Affiliations
Heriot- Watt University, UKEra Eligible
- Yes
Medium
Print-ElectronicJournal
Marine Pollution BulletinArticle Number
111364Usage metrics
Keywords
Licence
Exports
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