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Citizen science highlights litter associated with COVID-19 as a potential threat on the island of Mindanao, Philippines: a marine biodiversity hotspot

Journal of Marine and Island Cultures 2021 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Neil Angelo S. Abreo, Vladimer Kobayashi

Summary

This citizen science study documented marine litter including COVID-19-related disposable personal protective equipment on beaches of Mindanao in the Philippines, a marine biodiversity hotspot. The study found widespread distribution of pandemic-related plastic waste and highlights how citizen science can rapidly assess emerging pollution threats in biodiversity-sensitive coastal areas.

The on-going COVID-19 pandemic is expected to exacerbate the marine litter problem. The use of disposable personal protective equipment (e.g., facemasks) will result to increase in marine plastics pollution. Here we explored the potential of citizen science to determine the distribution of marine litter associated with COVID-19 in Mindanao, Philippines. Volunteers were invited through social media, contributing geotagged photographs of marine litter associated with COVID-19. Although the information is limited, results showed the possible pervasiveness of marine litter associated with COVID-19. Since the waters surrounding the Southern Philippines is known to host high marine biodiversity, the potential negative interaction of marine litter associated with COVID-19 and marine species is inevitable. The contribution of citizen science to address some of the limitations on marine litter research is highlighted and is recommended to be explored further.

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