Authors
Mark Anthony Browne, M Gee Chapman, Richard C Thompson, Linda A Amaral Zettler, Jenna Jambeck, Nicholas J Mallos
Publication date
2015/6/16
Source
Environmental Science & Technology
Volume
49
Issue
12
Pages
7082-7094
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Description
Floating and stranded marine debris is widespread. Increasing sea levels and altered rainfall, solar radiation, wind speed, waves, and oceanic currents associated with climatic change are likely to transfer more debris from coastal cities into marine and coastal habitats. Marine debris causes economic and ecological impacts, but understanding the scope of these requires quantitative information on spatial patterns and trends in the amounts and types of debris at a global scale. There are very few large-scale programs to measure debris, but many peer-reviewed and published scientific studies of marine debris describe local patterns. Unfortunately, methods of defining debris, sampling, and interpreting patterns in space or time vary considerably among studies, yet if data could be synthesized across studies, a global picture of the problem may be avaliable. We analyzed 104 published scientific papers on marine …
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