• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Plastic On Beaches Can Now Be Seen From Space With New Satellite Technology

November 6, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A new satellite imagery technique allows scientists to see plastic on beaches from space. The technique can identify differences in how sand, water, and plastic reflect light, enabling researchers to spot debris on shorelines from over 600 km (372 miles) overhead.

Plastic is a massive issue in many environmental contexts, but it is an increasingly pressing issue for marine habitats. In recent years, the dense accumulation of marine plastic has even been recorded in isolated and sparsely populated areas such as remote islands in the Pacific and Indian oceans, or on the beaches of Northern Australia. It is now estimated that between 19 and 23 million metric tons of plastic enter the sea or coastal environments each year, a number that may double by 2030.

Advertisement

This is a significant problem as plastic has various detrimental impacts on biodiversity as well as local economies.

“Plastics can be mistaken for food, larger animals become entangled and smaller ones, like hermit crabs, become trapped inside items such as plastic containers,” the study’s lead author Dr Jenna Guffogg from RMIT University explained in a statement.

“Remote island beaches have some of the highest recorded densities of plastics in the world, and we’re also seeing increasing volumes of plastics and derelict fishing gear on the remote shorelines of northern Australia.”

If plastic isn’t cleaned up, it eventually fragments into smaller pieces of micro and nano plastics, which cause even more harm.

Advertisement

“While the impacts of these ocean plastics on the environment, fishing and tourism are well documented, methods for measuring the exact scale of the issue or targeting clean-up operations, sometimes most needed in remote locations, have been held back by technological limitations,” Guffogg added.

Satellite technologies have already been developed to track massive amounts of plastic drifting in the world’s oceans, and there’s a lot of it – from small drifts made up of thousands of bottles, bags, and fishing nets, to enormous plastic masses like the Great Pacific Garbage Patch that has become three times the size of France.

But while these satellite technologies are good at spotting plastic floating in the water, they are less effective at spotting debris on beaches, where it can fade into the surrounding sand. However, Australian researchers have now developed an effective way to see plastic on beaches so its accumulation can be easily identified and clean-up efforts can become more targeted.

Guffogg and colleagues have developed the Beached Plastic Debris Index (BPDI), which is essentially a mathematical formula that assesses patterns of reflected light picked up by satellites as they pass overhead. This allows them to identify the most interesting aspects of an image.

Advertisement

Similar tools already exist for monitoring forests and tracking bushfires from space, but this new version is designed to map plastic debris on beaches using data from the WorldView-3 satellite – a super-spectral, high-resolution commercial satellite sensor. This system orbits the Earth in line with the sun at an altitude of 617 km (383 miles).

Spotting plastic from space

To test BPDI’s plastic-spotting abilities, the researchers placed 14 plastic targets – each about 2 square meters (21.5 square feet) – on a beach in southern Gippsland, Victoria. These targets were made of different types of plastic and were smaller than the satellite’s pixel size (3 square meters).

The BPDI’s images were compared with three existing indices – one designed to find plastic in water, and two designed to find plastic on land. In each case, the existing indices struggled to differentiate plastic on beaches or experienced classification errors where they mistook shadow and water for plastics. However, this was not the case for BPDI, which out-performed all the others.

The image shows two versions of a satellite photo, with one being nested in the bottom left hand corner of the other. The main image is a scan that shows a bright spot where a plastic target was situated, while the smaller image shows the area of the beach where this was detected.

The new satellite system may help direct plastic clean-up operations as it becomes easier to identify plastic accumulated in remote locations.

Image credit: RMIT University.

“This is incredibly exciting, as up to now we have not had a tool for detecting plastics in coastal environments from space,” study co-author Dr Mariela Soto-Berelov added.

Advertisement

“The beauty of satellite imagery is that it can capture large and remote areas at regular intervals.”

The detection of plastic debris is a significant step in planning clean-up operations, a key aspect of several Sustainable Development Goals. If it continues to perform as planned, BPDI may represent a new way to make these goals deliverable. The next step is to test the system’s utility in a real-life scenario.

The paper is published in the journal Marine Pollution Bulletin.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Cricket-Manchester test likely to be postponed after India COVID-19 case
  2. EU to attend U.S. trade meeting put in doubt by French anger
  3. Soccer-West Ham win again, Leicester and Napoli falter
  4. Was Jesus A Hallucinogenic Mushroom? One Scholar Certainly Thought So

Source Link: Plastic On Beaches Can Now Be Seen From Space With New Satellite Technology

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • This View Of The Pacific Will Change The Way You See Planet Earth
  • Decapitated Dolphin Found On Remote US Island – And NOAA Wants To Know Who’s To Blame
  • Earth’s Strongest Solar Storm Ever Hit In 12350 BCE – Could It Have Been A Fabled Super Solar Storm?
  • How Bright Is The Earth From The Moon And Could You Read By It?
  • New Powerful Antibiotic That Kills Superbugs Found Hiding Deep In A Chinese Mine
  • Infant Becomes First Human Ever To Receive Personalized CRISPR Gene Therapy Treatment
  • Montana Passes Bill Allowing Doctors To Prescribe Experimental Drugs Without FDA Approval
  • Humanity’s Longest Prehistoric Migration Was 20,000km On Foot – And We Now Know Who Took It
  • New Hypersonic Rotating Detonation Rocket Engine Passes Real-World Milestone
  • “This Story Is A Good One”: 40 Years Ago, Scientists Discovered A Hole In The Ozone Layer And Saved The Planet
  • “One Of World’s Largest Copper, Gold, And Silver Resources” Found In South America
  • Outrage Is Short-Lived: People More Likely To Resist New Rules Before They Come Into Effect
  • Birds Are Exploding In This California City – And No One Knows Why
  • Long COVID Brain Fog “Very Well Explained” By Altered Levels Of 2 Key Biomarkers
  • Experiment Appears To Confirm Mind-Bending Penrose-Terrell Effect Predicted 66 Years Ago
  • After 100 Years, Scientists Finally Find The Genetic Mutation That Makes Cats Orange
  • Nootropics: Do “Smart Drugs” Really Make You Smarter?
  • Better Solutions To Black Hole Collisions Thanks To 6-Dimensional Donuts
  • Weather Forecast On Titan: Methane Clouds With A Chance Of Showers, According To JWST
  • Tokyo Is The Biggest City In The World… Or Is It?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version