2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2018.02.042
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Spatial distribution of marine litter along italian coastal areas in the Pelagos sanctuary (Ligurian Sea - NW Mediterranean Sea): A focus on natural and urban beaches

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Cited by 54 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…Standard monitoring campaigns were carried out during our long-term monitoring program with the help of volunteers, citizens, researchers, and students, following the SeaCleaner protocol [52,53] (which meets the MFSD survey procedures [16] and the OSPAR guideline for size and type classification of BML [15]). To date, three beach cleaning operations have been carried out-at the beginning of the first period (12 April 2019), at the beginning of the second period (13 July 2019), and at the beginning of the third, for which data acquisition has not yet been completed (17 January 2020).…”
Section: Comparison With "Standard" Survey Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Standard monitoring campaigns were carried out during our long-term monitoring program with the help of volunteers, citizens, researchers, and students, following the SeaCleaner protocol [52,53] (which meets the MFSD survey procedures [16] and the OSPAR guideline for size and type classification of BML [15]). To date, three beach cleaning operations have been carried out-at the beginning of the first period (12 April 2019), at the beginning of the second period (13 July 2019), and at the beginning of the third, for which data acquisition has not yet been completed (17 January 2020).…”
Section: Comparison With "Standard" Survey Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After the initial scan of the monitoring program (12 April 2019), the removal of anthropic material from the stretch of beach considered was carried out, excluding only objects with a linear dimension less than 2.5 cm (OSPAR protocol). The collected material was subsequently catalogued and counted according to a protocol previously adopted in this type of monitoring; this protocol integrated the Marine Strategy Framework Directives (MSFD) survey procedures [16], the OSPAR guideline [15] for size and type classification of BML and citizen science contribution, involving volunteers, researchers, and university students during beach cleaning operations, classification, and counting of objects (SeaCleaner protocol [52,53]). As a result, we could compare and match the ortho-photo data with those collected by standard manual surveys.…”
Section: Survey Realizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The density of ML on the west coast of Qatar (1.98 items/m 2 ) is higher than the global average of 1.0 items/m 2 (Galgani et al, 2015). Moreover, the average ML density is higher compared to that of other coastal regions (e.g., Red Sea (Martin et al, 2019), Italy (Giovacchini et al, 2018) and Slovenia (Laglbauer et al, 2014)), however, lesser than some other coastal regions (e.g., Iran (Sarafraz et al, 2016), Colombia (Rangel-Buitrago et al, 2017) and India (Jayasiri et al, 2013)). Overall, the quantity of stranded ML items along the coast shows the following order: low tide (296 items) < high tide (860 items) < berm line (1220 items).…”
Section: Abundance Spatial Distribution and Composition Of MLmentioning
confidence: 83%