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Author comment: Suitability of river plastic monitoring methods for citizen science — R1/PR6

2025
Tim van Emmerik

Summary

Researchers evaluated the suitability of several river plastic monitoring methods for citizen science through field monitoring and surveys with citizen scientists in Accra, Ghana, assessing which approaches can provide continuous basic knowledge of plastic pollution at a global scale to measure the efficacy of reduction measures.

Study Type Environmental

Rivers act as long-term plastic storage and a pathway for land-based plastic pollution into the ocean. Monitoring river plastic at a global scale remains challenging, with only limited large-scale and long-term monitoring efforts to date. Citizen science approaches may ensure a more continuous basic knowledge of plastic pollution in rivers, which can be used to assess the efficacy of reduction measures. We evaluated the suitability of several river plastic monitoring methods for citizen science, through field monitoring and a subsequent survey with citizen scientists in Accra, Ghana. Four measurement techniques (visual counting, macroplastic net sampling, microplastic net sampling and hydrometric measurements) were tested in the field and evaluated by citizen scientists. The visual counting method, used to estimate floating macroplastic transport, emerged as the most promising method for citizen science–based river plastic monitoring. Using the data collected by citizens, we quantify the variability in transport and concentration of both macroplastic and microplastic.

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