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Monitoring macroplastics in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems: Expert survey reveals visual and drone-based census as most effective techniques

Toxics 2024 16 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Luca Gallitelli, Pierre Girard, Umberto Andriolo, Maciej Liro, Giuseppe Suaria, Cecilia Martin, Amy Lusher, Kasper Hancke, Martín C. M. Blettler, Odei Garcia‐Garin, I.E. Napper, Laura Corbari, Andrés Cózar, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Daniel González‐Fernández, Johnny Gaspéri, Tommaso Giarrizzo, Giulia Cesarini, Kalyan De, Mel Constant, Paschalis Koutalakis, Gil Gonçalves, Prabhakar Sharma, Sedat Gündoğdu, Rakesh Kumar, Nicolás Garello, A.L.G. Camargo, K Topouzelis, François Galgani, S.J. Royer, George Ν. Zaimes, Federica Rotta, Samantha Lavender, Veronica Nava, J Castro-Jiménez, Thomas Mani, Roberto Crosti, Valter M. Azevedo‐Santos, Filipa Bessa, Romain Tramoy, Mônica F. Costa, Corinne Corbau, Alberto Montanari, Corrado Battisti, Massimiliano Scalici

Summary

A survey of 46 plastic pollution researchers found that traditional visual census and drone-based UAV surveys were rated as the most effective methods for monitoring macroplastic litter in riverine and marine environments, while satellite imagery and GPS/GNSS trackers received lower scores due to limited field validation and short performance ranges. The study provides a researcher-based assessment framework to guide selection of monitoring approaches and support global harmonization of macroplastic monitoring protocols.

Anthropogenic litter, such as plastic, is investigated by the global scientific community from various fields employing diverse techniques. The goal is to assess and finally mitigate the pollutants' impacts on the natural environment. Plastic litter can accumulate in different matrices of aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, impacting both biota and ecosystem functioning. Detection and quantification of macroplastics, and other litter, can be realized by jointly using visual census and remote sensing techniques. The primary objective of this research was to identify the most effective approach for monitoring macroplastic litter in riverine and marine environments through a comprehensive survey based on the experiences of the scientific community. Researchers involved in plastic pollution evaluated four litter occurrence and flux investigation methods (visual census, drone-based surveys, satellite imagery, and GPS/GNSS trackers) through a questionnaire. Traditional visual census and drone deployment were deemed as the most popular approaches among the 46 surveyed researchers, while satellite imagery and GPS/GNSS trackers received lower scores due to limited field validation and short performance ranges, respectively. On a scale from 0 to 5, visual census and drone-based surveys obtained 3.5 and 2.0, respectively, whereas satellite imagery and alternative solutions received scores lower than 1.2. Visual and drone censuses were used in high, medium and low-income countries, while satellite census and GPS/GNSS trackers were mostly used in high-income countries. This work provides an overview of the advantages and drawbacks of litter investigation techniques, contributing i) to the global harmonization of macroplastic litter monitoring and ii) providing a starting point for researchers and water managers approaching this topic. This work supports the selection and design of reliable and cost-effective monitoring approaches to mitigate the ambiguity in macroplastic data collection, contributing to the global harmonization of macroplastic litter monitoring protocols.

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