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Monitoring of seafloor litter on the Dutch continental shelf : International Bottom Trawl Survey 2022, Dutch Beam Trawl Survey 2021

2022 1 citation ? 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.
Onderz. Form. I., Joey Volwater, R. van Hal, Ralf van Hal

Summary

This monitoring report presents data on seafloor plastic litter collected on the Dutch continental shelf during international bottom trawl surveys. Tracking marine litter on the seafloor is a required component of EU efforts to assess and improve ocean environmental quality under the Marine Strategy Framework Directive.

The Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) requires EU Member States to develop programmes of measures that aim to achieve or maintain Good Environmental Status(GES) in European seas. In order to be able to evaluate the quality status of marine waters on a regular basis and the effects of the measures taken, monitoring programs for MSFD descriptors and indicators have been established by the Member States. The Dutch monitoring program for Marine Litter (Descriptor 10) includes the collection of data on the presence, abundance and distribution of macro litter on the seafloor. According to the Dutch program, the data on seafloor litter must be collected during statutory task fish surveys using a standardised Grand Ouverture Verticale (GOV) fishing net as part of the International Bottom Trawl Survey (IBTS), which is carried out yearly in the North Sea. Anthropogenic pollution of our oceans, including marine litter, threatens wildlife, hindershuman activities and reduces the recreational value of our coasts. Marine litter affects all groups of marine wildlife through effects such as entanglement and ingestion. Various initiatives to reduce litter in the (marine) environment have recently been started or are currently under discussion. Despite management measures to decrease the input of litter and to remove litter from the environment, litter is still found in monitoring of the seafloor.This report presents the seafloor litter composition, abundance and spatial distribution based upon catches of the regular fish surveys, the IBTS and the Dutch Beam Trawl Survey(BTS). Only the catches on the Dutch Continental Shelf (DCS) are used for data analysis.To assess the status of seafloor litter on the DCS, the Dutch data are supplemented with those from international partners surveying the DCS within the IBTS.The seafloor litter catches on the DCS consisted mainly of plastic items: 93% (IBTS) and 88% (BTS) of the litter items found were made of plastic. Monofilaments, plastic sheets and various types of (plastic) ropes/lines were the most commonly caught litter types. A mean density of 88 litter items per km2 over the years 2020-2022 was calculated for the IBTS on the DCS, whereby for the BTS a mean density of 198 litter items per km2 over the last two years (2020-2021) was calculated on the DCS. It should be noted that the net used during the IBTS (GOV) and BTS (beam trawl) is not designed to catch litter. For the GOV, the catchability of many benthic species is assumed to be less than 5% compared to a beam trawl, therefore the chance of catching a litter item when it is present in the trawl path is likely to be even smaller than 5%. The fact that these items are caught despite the suggested low catchability thus indicates that it is plausible that there are many more litter items in the trawl path and that current values are a large under estimation of the actual amount of litter present. On top of that, due to the selectivity of the fishing gears used in the surveys, only a selection of the types of litter items present retain in the net. This is reflected by the fact that hardly any (small) single-use plastics, such as cutleries, strawsand stirrers, were caught. However, by including the BTS survey a slightly better picture of the litter types present on the seafloor is provided since two times more items werecollected and a wider range of litter items was caught. Therefore, the BTS data will be included in this report the coming years. Yet, the abundance and density estimations of seafloor litter presented in this report have to be considered a minimum estimation of the total amount of a selection of litter types present on the DCS, rather than its actual status.

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