Daily apportionment of stranded plastic debris in the Bintan Coastal area, Indonesia

authors

  • Syakti Agung Dhamar
  • Jacob Maxime
  • Birrien Timothee
  • Suhana Mario Putra
  • Aziz Muhammad Yudistira
  • Salim Agus
  • Doumenq Pierre
  • Louarn Guy

keywords

  • Plastic litters
  • Coastal contamination
  • Macroplastics
  • Microplastics
  • Marine environment

document type

ART

abstract

This study aims to provide a baseline report of the apportionment of stranded plastic debris (macro) in Bintan Island beaches. Their quantity and composition were assessed during a 45-day survey demonstrating the occurrence of the 3378 plastic fragments, which were, in decreasing order, constituted by LDPE (22.9%), PS (19.5%), PP (16.6%), PET (10.4%), HDPE (9.2%), PVC (7.2%), PU (4.9%), polyester (4.7%), polyamide (4.3%), and styrene/butadiene (0.3%). The abundance ranged from 1.2 to 4.7 items/m2. Additional apportionment ranged from 0.03 to 0.15 items/m2 per day with an arithmetic mean of 0.09 ± 0.05 items/m2 per day, mainly related to domestic waste influenced by hydrodynamic action such as longshore current and wind dynamics. Furthermore, we suggested mitigation measures focused on local action to address the plastic debris problem in Bintan beaches, which are typical of the coasts of small islands in Indonesia.

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