4.8 Article

Can we quantify the aquatic environmental plastic load from aquaculture?

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 219, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118551

Keywords

Plastic load; Source of microplastics; Aquaculture; Satellite remote sensing; UAV

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41776174]
  2. Chinese White Dolphin Conservation Action Plan [171821301354051004, 171721301354051016]
  3. 2019 Guangxi One Thousand Young and Middle-Aged College and University Backbone Teachers Cultivation Program
  4. foundation of Beibu Gulf Ocean Development Research center, the key research base of humanities and social sciences in Guangxi universities [BHZKY2101]
  5. foundation of Guangxi Key Laboratory of Beibu Gulf Marine Biodiversity Conservation [2020ZB04]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Aquaculture is a major source of plastic pollution, and this study developed a framework to assess and manage plastic loads from aquaculture. By combining different data sources, the framework helps to understand aquaculture patterns and estimate plastic waste generation. The study applied this framework to evaluate plastic pollution from oyster floating raft farming in China and suggested measures for plastic management.
Aquaculture provides livelihoods for hundreds of millions of people, but it also forms a significant source of plastic litter that poses a serious hazard to aquatic ecosystems. How to assess and subsequently manage plastic loads from aquaculture is a pending and pressing issue for aquaculture sustainability, and an important concern for water environment monitoring and management. In this study, we developed the first framework for estimating plastic litter from aquaculture by combining data from satellite remote sensing, drones, questionnaires, and in situ measurements. By acquiring multidimensional (human and nature) and multiscale (centimeter to basin scale) data, this framework helped us understand the aquaculture farming patterns and its spatial and temporal evolution, and thus estimate the plastic load it generates and suggest effective management approaches. Applying this framework, we assessed the marine plastic load from oyster floating raft farming in the Maowei Sea, a typical mariculture bay in China, with an increasing farming area. Approximately 3840 tons of plastic waste is expected to be discharged into the sea in the next four years (the average service life of a floating raft) without improvements in aquaculture waste management. Strengthening governance, timely plastic removal, innovative replacement, and transforming farmers' behavior patterns are recommended as the subsequent measures for plastic management. This framework can be extended to other regions and other aquaculture patterns, and is applicable to local, regional, and global aquaculture plastic litter assessments. It is a source-based method for evaluating plastic pollution that is more conducive to subsequent plastic management than traditional post-contamination environmental monitoring. In the context of the global expansion of mariculture and the global commitment to action to combat plastic pollution, this approach could play a critical role in the investigation and management of plastic waste in aquatic environments.

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