Marine litter from circalittoral and deeper bottoms off the Maltese islands (Central Mediterranean)

During the 2005 leg of the MEDITS trawl survey, benthic anthropogenic debris around the Maltese Islands (central Mediterranean) was quantified for the first time, with the aim of studying its abundance and distribution in the area. 357 items were sampled from 3.5 km2 of swept area. Each item was rec...

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Main Authors: R. MIFSUD, M. DIMECH, P.J. SCHEMBRI
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hellenic Centre for Marine Research 2013-06-01
Series:Mediterranean Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/hcmr-med-mar-sc/article/view/12377
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spelling doaj-608283eaace344ffabb7b0e2ebd4ecf12020-11-25T02:19:35ZengHellenic Centre for Marine ResearchMediterranean Marine Science1108-393X1791-67632013-06-0114229830810.12681/mms.41310782Marine litter from circalittoral and deeper bottoms off the Maltese islands (Central Mediterranean)R. MIFSUD0M. DIMECH1P.J. SCHEMBRI2Department of Biology, University of Malta, Msida, MSD 2080, Malta Fisheries Control Directorate, Ministry for Resources and Rural Affairs (FCD - MRRA), Barriera Wharf, Valletta, VLT 1970, MaltaFisheries Control Directorate, Ministry for Resources and Rural Affairs (FCD - MRRA), Barriera Wharf, Valletta, VLT 1970, MaltaDepartment of Biology, University of Malta, Msida, MSD 2080, MaltaDuring the 2005 leg of the MEDITS trawl survey, benthic anthropogenic debris around the Maltese Islands (central Mediterranean) was quantified for the first time, with the aim of studying its abundance and distribution in the area. 357 items were sampled from 3.5 km2 of swept area. Each item was recorded, measured and its planar and surface areas were estimated. Plastic (47%), metal and glass (13% respectively) were the most prevalent types of litter in terms of number. Limestone slabs, sacks and fabric were the items with the highest planar and surface area per item. This suggests that it is also important to consider the size of debris items as well as numerical abundance in assessing impact of litter on benthic organisms. An attempt was made to correlate anthropogenic and environmental variables, including fishing activities and wave parameters, to litter abundance and distribution but no interpretable correlations were found, implying that litter abundance and distribution depends on factors other than those considered.https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/hcmr-med-mar-sc/article/view/12377Marine litter, Malta, trawling, MEDITS, GSA15.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. MIFSUD
M. DIMECH
P.J. SCHEMBRI
spellingShingle R. MIFSUD
M. DIMECH
P.J. SCHEMBRI
Marine litter from circalittoral and deeper bottoms off the Maltese islands (Central Mediterranean)
Mediterranean Marine Science
Marine litter, Malta, trawling, MEDITS, GSA15.
author_facet R. MIFSUD
M. DIMECH
P.J. SCHEMBRI
author_sort R. MIFSUD
title Marine litter from circalittoral and deeper bottoms off the Maltese islands (Central Mediterranean)
title_short Marine litter from circalittoral and deeper bottoms off the Maltese islands (Central Mediterranean)
title_full Marine litter from circalittoral and deeper bottoms off the Maltese islands (Central Mediterranean)
title_fullStr Marine litter from circalittoral and deeper bottoms off the Maltese islands (Central Mediterranean)
title_full_unstemmed Marine litter from circalittoral and deeper bottoms off the Maltese islands (Central Mediterranean)
title_sort marine litter from circalittoral and deeper bottoms off the maltese islands (central mediterranean)
publisher Hellenic Centre for Marine Research
series Mediterranean Marine Science
issn 1108-393X
1791-6763
publishDate 2013-06-01
description During the 2005 leg of the MEDITS trawl survey, benthic anthropogenic debris around the Maltese Islands (central Mediterranean) was quantified for the first time, with the aim of studying its abundance and distribution in the area. 357 items were sampled from 3.5 km2 of swept area. Each item was recorded, measured and its planar and surface areas were estimated. Plastic (47%), metal and glass (13% respectively) were the most prevalent types of litter in terms of number. Limestone slabs, sacks and fabric were the items with the highest planar and surface area per item. This suggests that it is also important to consider the size of debris items as well as numerical abundance in assessing impact of litter on benthic organisms. An attempt was made to correlate anthropogenic and environmental variables, including fishing activities and wave parameters, to litter abundance and distribution but no interpretable correlations were found, implying that litter abundance and distribution depends on factors other than those considered.
topic Marine litter, Malta, trawling, MEDITS, GSA15.
url https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/hcmr-med-mar-sc/article/view/12377
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