Source, sea and sink—A holistic approach to understanding plastic pollution in the Southern Caribbean

Marine plastics are considered to be a major threat to the sustainable use of marine and coastal resources of the Caribbean, on which the region relies heavily for tourism and fishing. To date, little work has quantified plastics within the Caribbean marine environment or examined their potential so...

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Main Authors: Courtene-Jones, Winnie, Maddalene, Taylor, James, Molly K., Smith, Natalie S., Youngblood, Kathryn, Jambeck, Jenna R., Earthowl, Sally, Delvalle-Borrero, Denise, Penn, Emily, Thompson, Richard C.
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Published: The Maritime Commons: Digital Repository of the World Maritime University 2021
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Online Access:https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/525
https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1526&context=lib_articles
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spelling ftworldmaritimeu:oai:commons.wmu.se:lib_articles-1526 2023-05-15T17:35:40+02:00 Source, sea and sink—A holistic approach to understanding plastic pollution in the Southern Caribbean Courtene-Jones, Winnie Maddalene, Taylor James, Molly K. Smith, Natalie S. Youngblood, Kathryn Jambeck, Jenna R. Earthowl, Sally Delvalle-Borrero, Denise Penn, Emily Thompson, Richard C. 2021-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/525 https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1526&context=lib_articles unknown The Maritime Commons: Digital Repository of the World Maritime University https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/525 https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1526&context=lib_articles Articles text 2021 ftworldmaritimeu 2023-01-22T08:29:36Z Marine plastics are considered to be a major threat to the sustainable use of marine and coastal resources of the Caribbean, on which the region relies heavily for tourism and fishing. To date, little work has quantified plastics within the Caribbean marine environment or examined their potential sources. This study aimed to address this by holistically integrating marine (surface water, subsurface water and sediment) and terrestrial sampling and Lagrangian particle tracking to examine the potential origins, flows and quantities of plastics within the Southern Caribbean. Terrestrial litter and the microplastics identified in marine samples may arise from the maritime and tourism industries, both of which are major contributors to the economies of the Caribbean region. The San Blas islands, Panama had the highest abundance of microplastics at a depth of 25 m, and significantly greater quantities in surface water than recorded in the other countries. Modelling indicated the microplastics likely arose from mainland Panama, which has some of the highest levels of mismanaged waste. Antigua had among the lowest quantities of terrestrial and marine plastics, yet the greatest diversity of polymers. Modelling indicated the majority of the microplastics in Antiguan coastal surface were likely to have originated from the wider North Atlantic Ocean. Ocean currents influence the movements of plastics and thus the relative contributions arising from local and distant sources which become distributed within a country's territorial water. These transboundary movements can undermine local or national legislation aimed at reducing plastic pollution. While this study presents a snapshot of plastic pollution, it contributes towards the void of knowledge regarding marine plastic pollution in the Caribbean Sea and highlights the need for international and interdisciplinary collaborative research and solutions to plastic pollution. Text North Atlantic World Maritime University (WMU): Maritime Commons
institution Open Polar
collection World Maritime University (WMU): Maritime Commons
op_collection_id ftworldmaritimeu
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description Marine plastics are considered to be a major threat to the sustainable use of marine and coastal resources of the Caribbean, on which the region relies heavily for tourism and fishing. To date, little work has quantified plastics within the Caribbean marine environment or examined their potential sources. This study aimed to address this by holistically integrating marine (surface water, subsurface water and sediment) and terrestrial sampling and Lagrangian particle tracking to examine the potential origins, flows and quantities of plastics within the Southern Caribbean. Terrestrial litter and the microplastics identified in marine samples may arise from the maritime and tourism industries, both of which are major contributors to the economies of the Caribbean region. The San Blas islands, Panama had the highest abundance of microplastics at a depth of 25 m, and significantly greater quantities in surface water than recorded in the other countries. Modelling indicated the microplastics likely arose from mainland Panama, which has some of the highest levels of mismanaged waste. Antigua had among the lowest quantities of terrestrial and marine plastics, yet the greatest diversity of polymers. Modelling indicated the majority of the microplastics in Antiguan coastal surface were likely to have originated from the wider North Atlantic Ocean. Ocean currents influence the movements of plastics and thus the relative contributions arising from local and distant sources which become distributed within a country's territorial water. These transboundary movements can undermine local or national legislation aimed at reducing plastic pollution. While this study presents a snapshot of plastic pollution, it contributes towards the void of knowledge regarding marine plastic pollution in the Caribbean Sea and highlights the need for international and interdisciplinary collaborative research and solutions to plastic pollution.
format Text
author Courtene-Jones, Winnie
Maddalene, Taylor
James, Molly K.
Smith, Natalie S.
Youngblood, Kathryn
Jambeck, Jenna R.
Earthowl, Sally
Delvalle-Borrero, Denise
Penn, Emily
Thompson, Richard C.
spellingShingle Courtene-Jones, Winnie
Maddalene, Taylor
James, Molly K.
Smith, Natalie S.
Youngblood, Kathryn
Jambeck, Jenna R.
Earthowl, Sally
Delvalle-Borrero, Denise
Penn, Emily
Thompson, Richard C.
Source, sea and sink—A holistic approach to understanding plastic pollution in the Southern Caribbean
author_facet Courtene-Jones, Winnie
Maddalene, Taylor
James, Molly K.
Smith, Natalie S.
Youngblood, Kathryn
Jambeck, Jenna R.
Earthowl, Sally
Delvalle-Borrero, Denise
Penn, Emily
Thompson, Richard C.
author_sort Courtene-Jones, Winnie
title Source, sea and sink—A holistic approach to understanding plastic pollution in the Southern Caribbean
title_short Source, sea and sink—A holistic approach to understanding plastic pollution in the Southern Caribbean
title_full Source, sea and sink—A holistic approach to understanding plastic pollution in the Southern Caribbean
title_fullStr Source, sea and sink—A holistic approach to understanding plastic pollution in the Southern Caribbean
title_full_unstemmed Source, sea and sink—A holistic approach to understanding plastic pollution in the Southern Caribbean
title_sort source, sea and sink—a holistic approach to understanding plastic pollution in the southern caribbean
publisher The Maritime Commons: Digital Repository of the World Maritime University
publishDate 2021
url https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/525
https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1526&context=lib_articles
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Articles
op_relation https://commons.wmu.se/lib_articles/525
https://commons.wmu.se/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1526&context=lib_articles
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