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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Role of Indian Ocean Dynamics on Accumulation of Buoyant Debris

TLDR
In this article, the authors used two types of ocean surface drifters as a proxy for buoyant debris and derived transport matrices from observed drifter locations and simulate the global accumulation of global plastic debris.
Abstract
Buoyant marine plastic debris has become a serious problem affecting the marine environment. To fully understand the impact of this problem, it is important to understand the dynamics of buoyant debris in the ocean. Buoyant debris accumulates in “garbage patches” in each of the subtropical ocean basins because of Ekman convergence and associated downwelling at subtropical latitudes. However, the precise dynamics of the garbage patches are not well understood. This is especially true in the southern Indian Ocean (SIO), where observations are inconclusive about the existence and numerical models predict inconsistent locations of the SIO garbage patch. In addition, the oceanic and atmospheric dynamics in the SIO are very different from those in the other oceans. The aim of this paper is to determine the dynamics of the SIO garbage patch at different depths and under different transport mechanisms such as ocean surface currents, Stokes drift, and direct wind forcing. To achieve this, we use two types of ocean surface drifters as a proxy for buoyant debris. We derive transport matrices from observed drifter locations and simulate the global accumulation of buoyant debris. Our results indicate that the accumulation of buoyant debris in the SIO is much more sensitive to different transport mechanisms than in the other ocean basins. We relate this sensitivity to the unique oceanic and atmospheric dynamics of the SIO.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The physical oceanography of the transport of floating marine debris

Erik van Sebille, +41 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors comprehensively discuss what is known about the different processes that govern the transport of floating marine plastic debris in both the open ocean and the coastal zones, based on the published literature and referring to insights from neighbouring fields such as oil spill dispersion, marine safety recovery, plankton connectivity, and others.

A novel strategy for accelerated simulation of passive tracers in ocean circulation models

S. Khatiwala, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a novel strategy is proposed for the efficient simulation of geochemical tracers in ocean models, which captures the tracer advection and diffusion in a general circulation model (GCM) without any alteration (or even knowledge) of the GCM code.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anthropogenic Marine Debris assessment with Unmanned Aerial Vehicle imagery and deep learning: A case study along the beaches of the Republic of Maldives

TL;DR: This work confirmed the efficiency of commercial UAVs as tools for AMD monitoring and demonstrated - for the first time - the potential of deep learning for the automatic detection and quantification of AMD.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beaching patterns of plastic debris along the Indian Ocean rim

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of beaching plastics by applying different beaching conditions to Lagrangian particle-tracking simulation results was determined by applying various conditions to the simulation results, and it was shown that a large amount of plastic likely ends up on coastlines in the NIO, while some crosses the Equator into the Southern Hemisphere Indian Ocean (SIO).
Journal ArticleDOI

Building a Maxey–Riley framework for surface ocean inertial particle dynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, a framework for the study of surface ocean inertial particle motion is built from the Maxey-Riley set, adapted to account for Earth's rotation effects, across the extent of a sufficiently small spherical particle that floats at an assumed unperturbed air-sea interface with unsteady nonuniform winds and ocean currents above and below, respectively.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Plastic waste inputs from land into the ocean

TL;DR: This work combines available data on solid waste with a model that uses population density and economic status to estimate the amount of land-based plastic waste entering the ocean, which is estimated to be 275 million metric tons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plastic Pollution in the World's Oceans: More than 5 Trillion Plastic Pieces Weighing over 250,000 Tons Afloat at Sea

TL;DR: The total number of plastic particles and their weight floating in the world's oceans is estimated from 24 expeditions across all five sub-tropical gyres, costal Australia, Bay of Bengal and the Mediterranean Sea conducting surface net tows and visual survey transects of large plastic debris.
Journal ArticleDOI

River plastic emissions to the world's oceans.

TL;DR: A global model of plastic inputs from rivers into oceans based on waste management, population density and hydrological information is presented to provide baseline data for ocean plastic mass balance exercises, and assist in prioritizing future plastic debris monitoring and mitigation strategies.
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