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  • Plastic pollution in island...
    Monteiro, Raqueline C.P.; Ivar do Sul, Juliana A.; Costa, Monica F.

    Environmental pollution (1987), July 2018, 2018-Jul, 2018-07-00, 20180701, Volume: 238
    Journal Article

    Marine plastic pollution is present in all oceans, including remote oceanic islands. Despite the increasing number of articles on plastic pollution in the last years, there is still a lack of studies in islands, that are biodiversity hotspots when compared to the surrounding ocean, and even other recognized highly biodiverse marine environments. Articles published in the peer reviewed literature (N = 20) were analysed according to the presence of macro (>5 mm) and microplastics (<5 mm) on beaches and the marine habitats immediately adjacent to 31 islands of the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea. The first articles date from the 1980s, but most were published in the 2000s. Articles on macroplastics were predominant in this review (N = 12). Beaches were the most studied environment, possibly due to easy access. The main focus of most articles was the spatial distribution of plastics associated with variables such as position of the beach in relation to wind and currents. Very few studies have analysed plastics colonization by organisms or the identification of persistent organic pollutants (POPs). Islands of the North/South Atlantic and Caribbean Sea were influenced by different sources of macroplastics, being marine-based sources (i.e., fishing activities) predominant in the Atlantic Ocean basin. On the other hand, in the Caribbean Sea, land-based sources were more common. Display omitted •Oceanic islands are marine biodiversity hotspots under threat of plastic pollution.•Beaches and surrounding waters are reported to be contaminated.•At present, studies are at the inventory level, and very few processes are known.•Atlantic islands might be a continuum of marine ecosystems connected by biotic and abiotic compartments.•The Caribbean islands have a differentiated status of (micro)plastics contamination. Oceanic Islands of the Atlantic Ocean are under threat of plastic pollution from different sources, resulting from widely variable accumulation patterns and effects.