Nature Communications (Jun 2024)

Proof of concept for a new sensor to monitor marine litter from space

  • Andrés Cózar,
  • Manuel Arias,
  • Giuseppe Suaria,
  • Josué Viejo,
  • Stefano Aliani,
  • Aristeidis Koutroulis,
  • James Delaney,
  • Guillaume Bonnery,
  • Diego Macías,
  • Robin de Vries,
  • Romain Sumerot,
  • Carmen Morales-Caselles,
  • Antonio Turiel,
  • Daniel González-Fernández,
  • Paolo Corradi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-48674-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Worldwide, governments are implementing strategies to combat marine litter. However, their effectiveness is largely unknown because we lack tools to systematically monitor marine litter over broad spatio-temporal scales. Metre-sized aggregations of floating debris generated by sea-surface convergence lines have been reported as a reliable target for detection from satellites. Yet, the usefulness of such ephemeral, scattered aggregations as proxy for sustained, large-scale monitoring of marine litter remains an open question for a dedicated Earth-Observation mission. Here, we track this proxy over a series of 300,000 satellite images of the entire Mediterranean Sea. The proxy is mainly related to recent inputs from land-based litter sources. Despite the limitations of in-orbit technology, satellite detections are sufficient to map hot-spots and capture trends, providing an unprecedented source-to-sink view of the marine litter phenomenon. Torrential rains largely control marine litter inputs, while coastal boundary currents and wind-driven surface sweep arise as key drivers for its distribution over the ocean. Satellite-based monitoring proves to be a real game changer for marine litter research and management. Furthermore, the development of an ad-hoc sensor can lower the minimum detectable concentration by one order of magnitude, ensuring operational monitoring, at least for seasonal-to-interannual variability in the mesoscale.