This study represents the baseline of estimation of the potential service provided by fishermen as “cleaners of the sea”. The amount, composition and depth distribution of marine litter in fishing grounds of the Northern Adriatic seafloor has been investigated through the fishing for litter (FFL) scheme. Passive FFL campaigns were carried out by trawlers from two of the most important fishing ports in the northern Adriatic, Chioggia and Goro, from May 2020 to May 2021. Over the course of 256 days of fishing, over 6 tons of litter were removed from 265 km2 of seafloor. Abandoned, lost and derelict fishing gears (ALDFG) were the most represented litter category (48 % of the total litter), and of these 67 % were plastic ALDFG (mostly mussel socks and fishing nets). Fouling on plastic waste was analyzed to determine the fraction of collected litter items that could be destinated to recycling. Only a small percentage of the plastic litter analyzed was “clean” from adherent and/or encrusting organisms. Approximately 2.4 tons of plastic were recovered, but, due to the biological colonization of surfaces, they cannot be recycled by using the technologies present in the area.

Benthic litter in fishing grounds of the Northern Adriatic: Role of the trawling fleet as cleaners of the seafloor

Mistri M
Primo
;
Casoni E;Strati V;Munari C
Ultimo
2024

Abstract

This study represents the baseline of estimation of the potential service provided by fishermen as “cleaners of the sea”. The amount, composition and depth distribution of marine litter in fishing grounds of the Northern Adriatic seafloor has been investigated through the fishing for litter (FFL) scheme. Passive FFL campaigns were carried out by trawlers from two of the most important fishing ports in the northern Adriatic, Chioggia and Goro, from May 2020 to May 2021. Over the course of 256 days of fishing, over 6 tons of litter were removed from 265 km2 of seafloor. Abandoned, lost and derelict fishing gears (ALDFG) were the most represented litter category (48 % of the total litter), and of these 67 % were plastic ALDFG (mostly mussel socks and fishing nets). Fouling on plastic waste was analyzed to determine the fraction of collected litter items that could be destinated to recycling. Only a small percentage of the plastic litter analyzed was “clean” from adherent and/or encrusting organisms. Approximately 2.4 tons of plastic were recovered, but, due to the biological colonization of surfaces, they cannot be recycled by using the technologies present in the area.
2024
Mistri, M; Casoni, E; Strati, V; Munari, C
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11392/2567154
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