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Fishing for litter, accidental catch in bottom trawl nets along the Catalan coast, Northwestern Mediterranean

Waste Management 2023 20 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Marc Balcells, Marta Blanco, Ana I. Colmenero, Claudio Barría, Ricardo Santos-Bethencourt, David Nos, C. López‐Pérez, Jordi Ribera-Altimir, Joan Sala‐Coromina, Mariona Garriga-Panisello, Alba Rojas, Eve Galimany

Summary

Analysis of marine litter caught by bottom trawlers along the Catalan coast found plastic in 97% of 305 hauls over three years, with an estimated total removal potential of 237 tons per year, concentrated near urbanized areas and dominated by plastic including wet wipes near Barcelona.

The seafloor of the Mediterranean Sea accumulates marine litter (ML), an area where bottom trawlers operate and can accidentally catch the litter from the seafloor. This study aims to describe and quantify the ML caught by bottom trawlers along the Catalan coast (NW Mediterranean Sea) and estimate the potential of the bottom trawl fleet to extract ML from the area as a Fishing for Litter (FFL) initiative to tackle the ML issue. Marine litter was collected from commercial trawlers and was classified as metal, plastic, rubber, textile, wood, and other waste and weighed (kg) from 305 hauls performed during three years (2019-2021) from 9 different ports at 3 different depths. ML was present in 97 % of the hauls, with plastic being the most abundant material. The composition varied according to zone, port and depth, with the highest densities found in highly urbanized areas (13.75 ± 3.25 kg km-2), which mainly contained plastics (74.3 %). The port of Barcelona had the highest presence of plastics (23.62 ± 6.49 kg km-2), mainly wet wipes. Regarding depth, the continental shelf had the highest density of ML, with 12.24 ± 2.40 kg km-2. The potential ML removal (t year-1) was calculated using fishing effort (hours). It is estimated that the bottom trawlers may potentially remove 237 ± 36 t year-1 of ML in the Catalan coast. FFL initiatives should be part of a multidisciplinary approach to tackle marine litter, which must include prevention, monitoring, and cleaning actions.

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