Assessing Human and Physical Drivers of Macro-Plastic Debris Across Queensland, Australia

19 Pages Posted: 11 Feb 2023

See all articles by Jordan Gacutan

Jordan Gacutan

University of New South Wales (UNSW)

Heidi L. Tait

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Emma L. Johnston

The University of Sydney

Graeme F. Clark

The University of Sydney

Abstract

Plastic pollution poses environmental and socio-economic risks, requiring policy and management interventions. The evidence-base for informing management and evaluation of their effectiveness is limited. Partnerships with citizen scientists provide opportunities increase the spatio-temporal scale of monitoring programs, where training and standardised protocols provides opportunities for the use of data in addressing multiple hypotheses. Here, we provide a baseline of debris trends and infer debris drivers of abundance across 18° of latitude, using 168 surveys from 17 beaches across Queensland, Australia through the ReefClean project. Plastics were the dominant mate- rial (87% of total debris), although linking recovered debris to sources was limited, as 67% of items were fragmented. We tested potential drivers of specific debris types (i.e., plastics, commercial fishing items, items dumped at-sea, and single-use items) and identified significant relationships between debris accumulation with distance from the nearest population centre and site characteristics (modal beach state, beach orientation and across-beach section). Management efforts should consider beach type and orientation within site selection, as an opportunity to maximise the amount recovered, alongside other criteria such as the risks posed by debris on environmental, economic and social values. This study demonstrates the utility of citizen science to provide baselines and infer drivers of debris, through data gathered at scales that are infeasible to most formal monitoring programs. The identified drivers of debris may also differ from regional and global studies, where monitoring at relevant scales is needed for effective management.

Keywords: environmental monitoring, plastic pollution, Citizen science, marine debris, SDG14

Suggested Citation

Gacutan, Jordan and Tait, Heidi L. and Johnston, Emma L. and Clark, Graeme F., Assessing Human and Physical Drivers of Macro-Plastic Debris Across Queensland, Australia. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4354805 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4354805

Jordan Gacutan (Contact Author)

University of New South Wales (UNSW) ( email )

Heidi L. Tait

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

No Address Available

Emma L. Johnston

The University of Sydney ( email )

University of Sydney
Sydney, 2006
Australia

Graeme F. Clark

The University of Sydney ( email )

University of Sydney
Sydney, 2006
Australia

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
32
Abstract Views
145
PlumX Metrics