| Literature DB >> 35342685 |
Iviwe Mvovo1, Hezekiel B Magagula1.
Abstract
The use and undesignated disposal of COVID-19 related personal protective equipments (PPEs) has resulted in a spike in the global mismanagement of plastic waste. Moreover, the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has not only affected the socio-economic state of the world but is contributing significantly to the already existing aquatic pollution dilemma. Consequently, PPE litter is an emerging pollutant in aquatic ecosystems that warrants significant attention. This review endeavoured to present a synopsis of the global mismanagement of PPE waste and highlight the devastating ramifications of the ensuing environment. The paper reveals that PPE litter is indeed negatively impacting environmental systems on varying levels around the globe. Furthermore, peak plastic loads are transported by Asian rivers and are deposited into the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Beaches and seabed are the major sinks of COVID-19 PPE litter making benthic organisms to be the most vulnerable. More studies need to be undertaken to monitor aquatic resources to get a detailed overview of COVID-19 PPE litter in the environment.Entities:
Keywords: Aquatic systems; Covid-19; Microplastics; Personal protective equipment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35342685 PMCID: PMC8941298 DOI: 10.1007/s10669-022-09851-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Syst Decis ISSN: 2194-5411
Fig. 1Sources and transport of COVID-19 litter in the environment
Fig. 2Rivers that have discharged the highest COVID-19 wastes on beaches and the sea (
source: Peng et al. 2021)
Estimated facemasks entering oceans annually amid the COVID-19 pandemic
| Country | Facemask acceptance (%)a | Facemasks discarded (daily)b | Mismanaged wastes (ton)c | Wastes entering Oceans (ton)c |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indonesia | 80 | 122 538 579 | 250 371.39 | 100 148.553 |
| India | 80 | 386 401 228 | 128 007.22 | 51 202.88 |
| Vietnam | 90 | – | 83 140.58 | 33 256.23 |
| Philippines | 80 | – | 153 824.65 | 1529.86 |
| Chile | 85 | – | 3551.32 | 1420.52 |
| Brazil | 75 | 140 289 215 | 13 589.92 | 5435.96 |
| Argentina | 75 | 31 524 052 | 4044.14 | 1617.66 |
| Mexico | 75 | 81 227 634 | 4448.51 | 1779.41 |
| Iran | 80 | 51 067 713 | 4827.27 | 1930.91 |
| United Arab Emirates | 85 | – | 8442.30 | 3377.69 |
| Saudi Arabia | 80 | 23 394 921 | 110.52 | 44.21 |
| Russia | 80 | 86 393 201 | 25 651.47 | 10 260.58 |
| Italy | 80 | 33 374 928 | 9585.86 | 3834.34 |
| Turkey | 80 | 51 278 153 | 22 812.72 | 9125.08 |
| Nigeria | 70 | 75 034 810 | 21 519.67 | 8607.86 |
aAvailable at: https://www.worldometers.info/population/
bBenson et al. (2021)
cChowdhury et al. (2021)
COVID-19 related litter in aquatic environments around the world
| Region | Environment | PPE type | Abundance/Density | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bushehr, Persian Gulf | Beach | Facemasks, gloves | 2382 PPE items | Akhbarizadeh et al. ( |
| Santa Martha, Colombia | Beach | Facemask | NR | Ardusso et al. ( |
| Buenos Aires, Argentina | Beach | Facemasks, gloves, face shields | NR | Ardusso et al. ( |
| Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh | Beach | Facemasks, gloves | 29,254 PPE items | Rakib et al. ( |
| Santiago de Chile, Chile | Beach | Facemasks, wet wipes | NR | Ardusso et al. ( |
| Mediterranean Sea, Egypt | Beach | Gloves, facemasks | 2.93 PPE items m−2, 0.29 PPE items m−2 | Hassan et al. ( |
| Kenya | Beach | NR | 0 to 5.6 × 10–2 items m−2 | Okuku et al. ( |
| Mediterranean | Seafloor | NR | NR | Genries ( |
| Quindío, Colombia | River | Facemasks | NR | Ardusso et al. ( |
| Lima, Peru | Beach | Facemasks, face shields, gloves | 0 to 7.44 × 10−4 PPE m−2 | De-la-Torre et al. ( |
| Morocco | Beach | Facemasks | 1.13 × 10−5 PPE m−2 | Haddad et al. ( |
| Jakarta Bay, Indonesia | River | PPE | NR | Cordova et al. ( |
| Chile | Beach | NR | 6.00 × 10–3 items m−2 | Thiel et al. ( |
| Red Sea, Saudi Arabia | Beach | Gloves, facemasks | 0.86 PPE items m−2 | Hasan et al. (2022) |
| Peru and Argentina | Coasts | Peru: facemasks, face shields, gloves; Argentina: facemasks, face shields | Peru:462 PPE items; 6.60 × 10−4 PPE m−2, Argentina: 43 PPE items; 7.21 × 10−4 PPE m−2 | De-la-Torre et al. ( |
| Ethiopia | Lake | Facemasks | 221 PPEs with density of 1.22 × 10−5 PPE m−2 to 2.88 × 10−4 PPE m−2 | Aragaw et al. ( |
| Moroccan Mediterranean | Beach | Facemasks | 321 facemasks with density of 0.0012 m−2 | Mghili et al. ( |
| Caspian Sea | Sea | Facemasks (95.3%) | 1.02 × 10−4 PPE m−2 | Hatami et al. ( |
NR not reported