Abstract

Abstract. A large percentage of global ocean plastic waste enters the Northern Hemisphere Indian Ocean (NIO). Despite this, it is unclear what happens to buoyant plastics in the NIO. Because the subtropics in the NIO are blocked by landmass, there is no subtropical gyre and no associated subtropical garbage patch in this region. We therefore hypothesize that plastics “beach” and end up on coastlines along the Indian Ocean rim. In this paper, we determine the influence of beaching plastics by applying different beaching conditions to Lagrangian particle-tracking simulation results. Our results show 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). In the NIO, the transport of plastics is dominated by seasonally reversing monsoonal currents, which transport plastics back and forth between the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal. All buoyant plastic material in this region beaches within a few years in our simulations. Countries bordering the Bay of Bengal are particularly heavily affected by plastics beaching on coastlines. This is a result of both the large sources of plastic waste in the region and the ocean dynamics that concentrate plastics in the Bay of Bengal. During the intermonsoon period following the southwest monsoon season (September, October, November), plastics can cross the Equator on the eastern side of the NIO basin into the SIO. Plastics that escape from the NIO into the SIO beach on eastern African coastlines and islands in the SIO or enter the subtropical SIO garbage patch.

Highlights

  • Large amounts of plastic waste enter the ocean every year (Jambeck et al, 2015; Lebreton et al, 2017; Schmidt et al, 2017), potentially harming marine species and ecosystems (Law, 2017)

  • This mainly occurs during the intermonsoon period following the southwest monsoon season (September, October, November), and we suggest a mechanism for the “escape” of plastics from the Northern Hemisphere Indian Ocean (NIO) into the Southern Hemisphere Indian Ocean (SIO)

  • During the northeast monsoon season, particles are transported from the Bay of Bengal towards the Arabian Sea by the Northeast Monsoon Current (NMC, Fig. 3a)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Large amounts of plastic waste enter the ocean every year (Jambeck et al, 2015; Lebreton et al, 2017; Schmidt et al, 2017), potentially harming marine species and ecosystems (Law, 2017). Plastics accumulate in a subtropical garbage patch in the Southern Hemisphere Indian Ocean, but this patch is much more dispersive and sensitive to different transport mechanisms (currents, wind, waves) than the garbage patches in the other oceans (van der Mheen et al, 2019). The subtropical Northern Hemisphere Indian Ocean is blocked by landmass, so there is no subtropical gyre and associated garbage patch It is unclear if plastics entering the Northern Hemisphere Indian Ocean cross the Equator into the subtropical garbage patch in the Southern Hemisphere, as we explain further in the following paragraphs

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call