Assessment of Marine Debris in Selected Coastal Ecosystems of Sri Lanka

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dc.contributor.author Rupasinghe, H. P. A.
dc.date.accessioned 2026-06-15T05:45:03Z
dc.date.available 2026-06-15T05:45:03Z
dc.date.issued 2024
dc.identifier.uri http://www.digital.lib.esn.ac.lk//handle/1234/17636
dc.description.abstract Marine debris in Sri Lanka is increasing at an alarming causing many detrimental on marine ecosystems. Therefore, it is important to assess the abundance of marine debris and the physical damage that can be caused by debris on sensitive coastal and marine ecosystems such as coastal beaches and mangroves. Consequently, we conducted this study to assess the abundance and density of marine debris (both hazardous and nonhazardous) in seiected sites. Kallady, Negombo, Kandakuliya, and Balapitiya areas of Sri Lanka were selected based on the coastal and mangrove areas. Marine debris density was used to explore the extent of beach pollution from marine debris. We found 13 types of marine debris. inciuding sub-types. At each site, fragmented marine debris is more abundant than *,hole of marine debris. According to the Clean Coast lndex (CCI), the Kallady Beach site was classified as the "extremely dirty". while Kandakuliya Beach site, Negombo and Balapitiya Beach sites were classified as "dirty". As per the Hazardous Items Index (HiI), Kallady beach sites were grouped under the category (V) and the other 7 sites under the grouped category (IV). Further, according to Plastic Abundance Index (PAI) categories, Kallady Beach was grouped as having a "high level of plastic contamination". In contrast, Negombo Beach, Kandakuliya Beach, and Balapitiya Beach were grouped having "high to moderate levels of plastic contamination". Balapitiya mangrove site "lower abundance level of plastic contamination". The assessment indicates significant damage to the mangroves' leaves, roots, stems, branches, and litter accumulation at sites. We evaluate the total density (TD). fragmented density (FD), whole density (WD), and physical damage (PD) of marine debris in various mangrove sites. Pearson's correlation analysis depicts the link between debris density and several forms of vegetation damage, such as leaf, root, stem, and branch damage, as well as litter accumulation. The study underscores the critical need for tailored waste management strategies, especially in coastal areas where pollution levels surpass those in mangrove habitats. Unsustainable fishing and poor waste management have impacted species Iike Avicennia marina. necessitating urgent interventions for its protection. fhe study suggests that more effective environmental protection should focus on innovative waste strategies, stronger laws. and corporate accountability. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Faculty of Technology en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries FTC201;
dc.subject Clean cost index en_US
dc.subject Hazardous marine debris en_US
dc.subject Hazardous Items Index en_US
dc.subject Plastic Pollution en_US
dc.subject Physical damages of mangrove en_US
dc.title Assessment of Marine Debris in Selected Coastal Ecosystems of Sri Lanka en_US
dc.type Research report en_US


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