Video_1_COVID-19 Impacts on Beaches and Coastal Water Pollution at Selected Sites in Ecuador, and Management Proposals Post-pandemic.MP4

The COVID-19 pandemic has obliged Governments all around the world to implement confinement and social distancing measures. Leisure and business activities on beaches and in ports have restricted direct and indirect contamination from, for example, plastics, hydrocarbon spillage, microbiological loa...

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Main Authors: Franklin I. Ormaza-Gonzaìlez, Divar Castro-Rodas, Peter J. Statham
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.669374.s002
https://figshare.com/articles/media/Video_1_COVID-19_Impacts_on_Beaches_and_Coastal_Water_Pollution_at_Selected_Sites_in_Ecuador_and_Management_Proposals_Post-pandemic_MP4/14891124
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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/14891124 2023-05-15T17:10:53+02:00 Video_1_COVID-19 Impacts on Beaches and Coastal Water Pollution at Selected Sites in Ecuador, and Management Proposals Post-pandemic.MP4 Franklin I. Ormaza-Gonzaìlez Divar Castro-Rodas Peter J. Statham 2021-07-01T06:16:27Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.669374.s002 https://figshare.com/articles/media/Video_1_COVID-19_Impacts_on_Beaches_and_Coastal_Water_Pollution_at_Selected_Sites_in_Ecuador_and_Management_Proposals_Post-pandemic_MP4/14891124 unknown doi:10.3389/fmars.2021.669374.s002 https://figshare.com/articles/media/Video_1_COVID-19_Impacts_on_Beaches_and_Coastal_Water_Pollution_at_Selected_Sites_in_Ecuador_and_Management_Proposals_Post-pandemic_MP4/14891124 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Oceanography Marine Biology Marine Geoscience Biological Oceanography Chemical Oceanography Physical Oceanography Marine Engineering COVID-19 confinement beaches pollution noise tourism ecuador Dataset Media 2021 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.669374.s002 2021-07-07T23:01:02Z The COVID-19 pandemic has obliged Governments all around the world to implement confinement and social distancing measures. Leisure and business activities on beaches and in ports have restricted direct and indirect contamination from, for example, plastics, hydrocarbon spillage, microbiological loads, and noise levels. This has led to temporarily improved environmental conditions, and the beaches having conditions closer to Marine Protected Areas. Here we report some impacts that have been studied using local surveys and qualitative observations in Ecuador at the popular beaches and ports of Salinas, Manta, and Galapagos. Satellite data support this information. Online surveys were carried out at critical moments of the pandemic: May (15th) and just after when measures were relaxed a little, but within lockdown in July (21st) 2020. Respondents were asked to compare conditions before and during the pandemic lockdown. Most (97–99%) suggested that beaches had significantly improved from visual observations during confinement. On a scale from 1 (worst) to 5 (best), the beaches of Salinas and Manta respectively were rated 2.2 and 2.8 (less than acceptable) before quarantine, and 4.5 and 4.3 after; results from the second survey (after 18 weeks of restrictions) were much the same. Replies from Galapagos showed a similar trend but with less marked differences. In addition to the beaches having less plastic and garbage, more fish, and large marine organisms, including humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae), dolphin (bottlenose, Tursiops truncatus), and manta ray (Manta sp.) were observed near to shore. At Galapagos beaches, turtles, sea lions, and sharks were observed many more times than pre COVID. Quantitative satellite data on Chlorophyl and attenuation coefficient (Kd, 490 nm) support the qualitative survey data that there is an improvement in coastal environment quality. Here we recommend that this unique opportunity resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic is used locally, regionally and globally to construct ... Dataset Megaptera novaeangliae Frontiers: Figshare Galapagos The Beaches ENVELOPE(-56.832,-56.832,49.583,49.583)
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
COVID-19
confinement
beaches
pollution
noise
tourism
ecuador
spellingShingle Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
COVID-19
confinement
beaches
pollution
noise
tourism
ecuador
Franklin I. Ormaza-Gonzaìlez
Divar Castro-Rodas
Peter J. Statham
Video_1_COVID-19 Impacts on Beaches and Coastal Water Pollution at Selected Sites in Ecuador, and Management Proposals Post-pandemic.MP4
topic_facet Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
COVID-19
confinement
beaches
pollution
noise
tourism
ecuador
description The COVID-19 pandemic has obliged Governments all around the world to implement confinement and social distancing measures. Leisure and business activities on beaches and in ports have restricted direct and indirect contamination from, for example, plastics, hydrocarbon spillage, microbiological loads, and noise levels. This has led to temporarily improved environmental conditions, and the beaches having conditions closer to Marine Protected Areas. Here we report some impacts that have been studied using local surveys and qualitative observations in Ecuador at the popular beaches and ports of Salinas, Manta, and Galapagos. Satellite data support this information. Online surveys were carried out at critical moments of the pandemic: May (15th) and just after when measures were relaxed a little, but within lockdown in July (21st) 2020. Respondents were asked to compare conditions before and during the pandemic lockdown. Most (97–99%) suggested that beaches had significantly improved from visual observations during confinement. On a scale from 1 (worst) to 5 (best), the beaches of Salinas and Manta respectively were rated 2.2 and 2.8 (less than acceptable) before quarantine, and 4.5 and 4.3 after; results from the second survey (after 18 weeks of restrictions) were much the same. Replies from Galapagos showed a similar trend but with less marked differences. In addition to the beaches having less plastic and garbage, more fish, and large marine organisms, including humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae), dolphin (bottlenose, Tursiops truncatus), and manta ray (Manta sp.) were observed near to shore. At Galapagos beaches, turtles, sea lions, and sharks were observed many more times than pre COVID. Quantitative satellite data on Chlorophyl and attenuation coefficient (Kd, 490 nm) support the qualitative survey data that there is an improvement in coastal environment quality. Here we recommend that this unique opportunity resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic is used locally, regionally and globally to construct ...
format Dataset
author Franklin I. Ormaza-Gonzaìlez
Divar Castro-Rodas
Peter J. Statham
author_facet Franklin I. Ormaza-Gonzaìlez
Divar Castro-Rodas
Peter J. Statham
author_sort Franklin I. Ormaza-Gonzaìlez
title Video_1_COVID-19 Impacts on Beaches and Coastal Water Pollution at Selected Sites in Ecuador, and Management Proposals Post-pandemic.MP4
title_short Video_1_COVID-19 Impacts on Beaches and Coastal Water Pollution at Selected Sites in Ecuador, and Management Proposals Post-pandemic.MP4
title_full Video_1_COVID-19 Impacts on Beaches and Coastal Water Pollution at Selected Sites in Ecuador, and Management Proposals Post-pandemic.MP4
title_fullStr Video_1_COVID-19 Impacts on Beaches and Coastal Water Pollution at Selected Sites in Ecuador, and Management Proposals Post-pandemic.MP4
title_full_unstemmed Video_1_COVID-19 Impacts on Beaches and Coastal Water Pollution at Selected Sites in Ecuador, and Management Proposals Post-pandemic.MP4
title_sort video_1_covid-19 impacts on beaches and coastal water pollution at selected sites in ecuador, and management proposals post-pandemic.mp4
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.669374.s002
https://figshare.com/articles/media/Video_1_COVID-19_Impacts_on_Beaches_and_Coastal_Water_Pollution_at_Selected_Sites_in_Ecuador_and_Management_Proposals_Post-pandemic_MP4/14891124
long_lat ENVELOPE(-56.832,-56.832,49.583,49.583)
geographic Galapagos
The Beaches
geographic_facet Galapagos
The Beaches
genre Megaptera novaeangliae
genre_facet Megaptera novaeangliae
op_relation doi:10.3389/fmars.2021.669374.s002
https://figshare.com/articles/media/Video_1_COVID-19_Impacts_on_Beaches_and_Coastal_Water_Pollution_at_Selected_Sites_in_Ecuador_and_Management_Proposals_Post-pandemic_MP4/14891124
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.669374.s002
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