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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Darwin's paradise contaminated by marine debris. Understanding their sources and accumulation dynamics.☆

Environmental Pollution 2023 47 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Natalia Sánchez-García, Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Natalia Sánchez-García, Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Natalia Sánchez-García, Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Natalia Sánchez-García, Natalia Sánchez-García, Natalia Sánchez-García, Natalia Sánchez-García, Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro Carlos Sanz‐Lázaro

Summary

Researchers documented marine debris contamination across the Galapagos Islands, finding microplastics present even in these remote pristine environments, with oceanographic currents and local sources both contributing to accumulation patterns across beach sediments.

Study Type Environmental

Plastic pollution is a global environmental threat. Remote and pristine islands are not safe from this threat. Here, we estimated beach macro- (>25 mm), meso- (5-25 mm) and microdebris (<5 mm) levels in Galapagos and studied the role of environmental variables determining their accumulation. The vast majority of beach macro- and mesodebris were plastic, while most microdebris were cellulosic. The levels of beach macro-, meso- and microplastics were notably high and comparable with exceptional levels reported in contaminated areas. Oceanic currents and the anthropic pressure of use of the beach were the main factors that determined the level of macro- and mesoplastics, as well as the diversity of items, with more types of items in the beaches facing the predominant current. Microplastic levels were mainly driven by the slope and, to some extent, the grain size of the sediment in the beach. The absence of relationship between the levels of large size debris and the level of microplastics suggests that secondary microplastics that accumulated in the beaches were previously fragmented before arriving to the beach. This differential influence of environmental factors in the accumulation of marine debris according to their size should be taken into account when developing strategies to mitigate plastic pollution. Additionally, this study reports high levels of marine debris reported in a remote and protected area such as Galapagos, which are comparable to areas with direct sources of marine debris. This is especially worrying for Galapagos since the sampled beaches are cleaned at least annually. This fact highlights the global dimension of this environmental threat that demands further extensive international commitment to conserve some of the last paradises on Earth.

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