| Literature DB >> 29153726 |
Maria Cristina Fossi1, Cristina Pedà2, Montserrat Compa3, Catherine Tsangaris4, Carme Alomar3, Francoise Claro5, Christos Ioakeimidis6, Francois Galgani7, Tatjana Hema6, Salud Deudero3, Teresa Romeo2, Pietro Battaglia2, Franco Andaloro2, Ilaria Caliani1, Silvia Casini1, Cristina Panti8, Matteo Baini1.
Abstract
The Mediterranean Sea has been described as one of the most affected areas by marine litter in the world. Although effects on organisms from marine plastic litter ingestion have been investigated in several oceanic areas, there is still a lack of information from the Mediterranean Sea. The main objectives of this paper are to review current knowledge on the impact of marine litter on Mediterranean biodiversity, to define selection criteria for choosing marine organisms suitable for use as bioindicator species, and to propose a methodological approach to assessing the harm related to marine litter ingestion in several Mediterranean habitats and sub-regions. A new integrated monitoring tool that would provide the information necessary to design and implement future mitigation actions in the Mediterranean basin is proposed. According to bibliographic research and statistical analysis on current knowledge of marine litter ingestion, the area of the Mediterranean most studied, in terms of number of species and papers in the Mediterranean Sea is the western sub-area as well as demersal (32.9%) and pelagic (27.7%) amongst habitats. Applying ecological and biological criteria to the most threatened species obtained by statistical analysis, bioindicator species for different habitats and monitoring scale were selected. A threefold approach, simultaneously measuring the presence and effects of plastic, can provide the actual harm and sub-lethal effects to organisms caused by marine litter ingestion. The research revealed gaps in knowledge, and this paper suggests measures to close the gap. This and the selection of appropriate bioindicator species would represent a step forward for marine litter risk assessment, and the implementation of future actions and mitigation measures for specific Mediterranean areas, habitats and species affected by marine litter ingestion.Entities:
Keywords: Bioindicators; Marine litter; Mediterranean Sea; Microplastic; Plastic ingestion; Toxicological impact
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29153726 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.11.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071