Environmental implications of plastic debris in marine settings—entanglement, ingestion, smothering, hangers-on, hitch-hiking and alien invasions

University of Auckland

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Over the past five or six decades, contamination and pollution of the world's enclosed seas, coastal waters and the wider open oceans by plastics and other synthetic, non-biodegradable materials (generally known as 'marine debris') has been an ever-increasing phenomenon. The sources of these polluting materials are both land- and marine-based, their origins may be local or distant, and the environmental consequences are many and varied. The more widely recognized problems are typically associated with entanglement, ingestion, suffocation and general debilitation, and are often related to stranding events and public perception. Among the less frequently recognized and recorded problems are global hazards to…

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1,833
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Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Marine debris
  • Smothering
  • Biological dispersal
  • Debris
  • Plastic pollution
  • Biota
  • Pelagic zone
  • Ecology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life below water
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