Occurrence, prevalence, and classification of fishing related marine debris in Iceland’s Westfjords

Over the past few decades, Western attitudes and values have generally been trending towards greater protection of terrestrial and aquatic environments. A topic increasingly attracting government, media, and public attention—and the present study’s focus—is accumulation of human garbage in the ocean...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: O'Rourke, Amy, 1995-
Other Authors: Háskólinn á Akureyri
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/34986
Description
Summary:Over the past few decades, Western attitudes and values have generally been trending towards greater protection of terrestrial and aquatic environments. A topic increasingly attracting government, media, and public attention—and the present study’s focus—is accumulation of human garbage in the ocean. Such refuse, much of which stems from global fishing industries, can harm aquatic flora and fauna, either directly (e.g., choking, entanglement) or by entering the food chain or leaching toxic compounds into the ecosystem. Before this mounting concern can be halted, researchers must first find out a) which sorts of debris are most common and b) which sectors produce the most waste. In Iceland, however, these regionally-variable factors have yet to be the focus of extensive academic inquiry. To fill this gap in the literature, this project develops and tests a taxonomy of common marine debris types in the North Atlantic. By counting refuse washed ashore on 6 beaches in Iceland’s Westfjords region, this exploratory study has found that Abandoned, Lost or Discarded Fishing Gear (ALDFG; namely, floats, ropes, trawl, gill net, line, lures, etc.) constitute the vast majority of fishing related local marine debris. These findings illuminate problem areas in current waste management and suggests fishing-related materials should be continuously monitored to mitigate the risks they pose to the aquatic environment. Although Iceland has strict waste management protocols for its fisheries, clearly more needs to be done. Future research building on these preliminary findings should more thoroughly unravel how fishing-related refuse becomes marine debris. The findings of such research could identify specific fishing (and other) operations at high-risk for producing marine debris, and, thus, inform future management. Seinustu áratugi hafa viðhorf og gildi vestræna heimsins hallað sí meira að frekari vernd umhverfisins bæði í hafi og á landi. Viðfangsefni sem fær aukandi athygli ríkisstjórna, fréttamiðla og almennings- og ...