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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. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Environmental assessment of common octopus (Octopus vulgaris) from a small-scale fishery in Algarve (Portugal)

The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment 2022 18 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jara Laso, Philippe Loubet, Cheila Almeida, Cheila Almeida, Jara Laso, António Marques Jara Laso, Jara Laso, Philippe Loubet, Philippe Loubet, Jara Laso, Jara Laso, Jara Laso, María Leonor Nunes, António Marques António Marques Jara Laso, António Marques António Marques António Marques António Marques María Leonor Nunes, António Marques António Marques António Marques António Marques António Marques María Leonor Nunes, António Marques Cheila Almeida, Cheila Almeida, António Marques António Marques María Leonor Nunes, António Marques António Marques Philippe Loubet, Philippe Loubet, António Marques Philippe Loubet, María Leonor Nunes, António Marques

Summary

Researchers conducted a lifecycle assessment of common octopus fishing in Portugal, estimating that 12.2 grams of plastic are lost to the environment per kilogram of octopus caught — mainly from lost fishing gear — and identified fuel use and gear type as the largest environmental impacts of this small-scale fishery.

Abstract Purpose Common octopus is the fishing species with highest economic revenue in Portugal, and its consumption per capita is very high. The majority of catches come from the small-scale fleet with pots and traps. The aims were to assess main environmental impacts of common octopus’ fishery with traps and pots in the Algarve region, where the most important fleet size and landings volume occurs, and to find if there are significant differences between both fishing gears. Methods The assessment includes standard LCA impact categories, fishery-specific impact categories, and quantification of macroplastics and microplastics emitted to the environment. The functional unit selected was 1 kg of octopus and the study was a ‘cradle to gate’ system. The scope included fishing operations until the product is landed at the harbour. Primary data was obtained by face-to-face questionnaires from 22 vessels, with an average of 1005 pots and 1211 traps per vessel, and 372 pots and 234 traps lost annually to the environment. Plastic pots have a concrete block and traps are a metal framed covered by plastic netting. Each trap or pot is connected to the main line at regular intervals. Unlike traps, pots do not need bait. Results and discussion Fuel contribution to global warming is very high and where the highest potential exists to lower down the carbon footprint. The fuel use intensity resulted in 0.9 L/kg of octopus. The bait used in traps is significant and raises further environmental costs related with fuel consumption. The use of traps represents more than two times the impacts found for pots in all the categories studied except ecotoxicity categories. Zinc use was the main contributor to ecotoxicity categories, but it has not been included in other fishery LCA studies. It was estimated that 12.2 g of plastics is lost to the environment per kg of octopus. The loss of macroplastics from fishing gears was the highest contributor. Conclusions The carbon footprint obtained was 3.1 kg CO 2 eq per kg of octopus, being lower compared to other seafood products, and less than half compared to octopus caught with trawling. Pots and traps are highly selective fishing gears, causing negligible disturbance to the seafloor. The stock is not assessed, but management measures exist and can be improved. A drawback exists related with gears lost to the environment.

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