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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. Detection Methods Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

SHORT-TERM OBSERVATION ON MARINE DEBRIS AT COASTAL AREAS OF TAKALAR DISTRICT AND MAKASSAR CITY, SOUTH SULAWESI-INDONESIA

Jurnal Ilmu Kelautan SPERMONDE 2019 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Akbar Tahir, Ahmad Faizal, Akbar Tahir, Akbar Tahir, Shinta Werorilangi Akbar Tahir, Akbar Tahir, Shinta Werorilangi Shinta Werorilangi Akbar Tahir, Shinta Werorilangi Shinta Werorilangi Shinta Werorilangi Shinta Werorilangi Shinta Werorilangi Shinta Werorilangi Shinta Werorilangi Akbar Tahir, Shinta Werorilangi Fajar Maulana Isman, Adi Zulkarnaen, Fajar Maulana Isman, Akbar Tahir, Ahmad Faizal, Shinta Werorilangi Akbar Tahir, Shinta Werorilangi Akbar Tahir, Akbar Tahir, Adi Zulkarnaen, Shinta Werorilangi Adi Zulkarnaen, Shinta Werorilangi Akbar Tahir, Akbar Tahir, Akbar Tahir, Akbar Tahir, Adi Zulkarnaen, Akbar Tahir, Shinta Werorilangi Arniati Massinai, Akbar Tahir, Ahmad Faizal, Shinta Werorilangi Shinta Werorilangi Arniati Massinai, Ahmad Faizal, Akbar Tahir, Shinta Werorilangi

Summary

Researchers surveyed marine debris on coastal areas in Takalar District, Indonesia, finding plastic as the dominant material type. Short-term monitoring of beach litter provides baseline data for understanding local plastic inputs to the ocean.

Study Type Environmental

Marine debris is defined as material that is solid, persistent, manufactured or processed, and deliberately or not-deliberately left in the marine environment. Marine debris comes in many shapes and forms, ranging in size from microscopic microplastics to large vessels. Marine debris is a big and growing global problem, pose threats to marine life sustainability. Plastic is a major component of marine debris, and single-use packaging accounts for an increasing part of the global marine debris load. Research on marine debris was conducted on coastal areas and Small Island of South Sulawesi destined for local tourism, i.e., Karama beach, Bodia beach and Mandi beach (Galesong, Takalar District), Tanjung Bayang beach, Akkarena beach and Lae-lae island/also known as Bob beach (Makassar City). This research was aimed at identifying marine debris according to its types, size, and mass. Debris was collected in a 25 x 60 m transect with direction 30 m towards land and waters, respectively, with 3 replication transects at every location, whilst collections of debris were conducted during low and high tides. Current (direction and speed) and waves (incoming direction and height) were also measured as supporting parameters. Surrounding sampling location characteristics were also recorded. The result showed that Karama beach is found with highest total marine debris mass in Takalar (36.44 kg), whilst in Makassar, the Lae-lae island was found to be the highest with debris mass (43.22 kg). Plastic was predominant debris at all sampling locations with percentages of 62.7 – 86.6%. Lastly, the predominant size was macro-debris (25-100 cm).

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