Marine debris removal benefits Hawaiian monk seals, ecosystems

Endangered Hawaiian monk seals and other marine life have benefitted from 25 years of large-scale marine debris removal in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI), according to the cover story in the current issue of Science.

Cover of Science issue (Photo: James Morioka)
The team’s work—“Four decades of Hawaiian monk seal entanglement data reveal the benefits of plastic debris removal”—is available online beginning Sep. 26, 2024 and in print on Sep. 27, 2024.

Scientists from NOAA Fisheries Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center (PIFSC) have been studying the devastating impacts of plastic pollution on marine mammals, sea turtles, fish and coral reefs for more than 40 years. To reduce harm to Hawaiian monk seals, as well as the broader marine ecosystem, large-scale, multi-agency, and multi-partner marine debris removal efforts were initiated to decrease impacts of plastic marine debris, primarily abandoned, lost and discarded fishing gear.

A team of researchers from PIFSC, the Papahānaumokuākea Marine Debris Project, and the University of Hawaiʻi Sea Grant College Program (Hawaiʻi Sea Grant) examined Hawaiian monk seal entanglement records spanning more than 40 years, both before and after large-scale removal efforts were initiated, and found a substantial reduction in the rate of entanglement where the debris removal effort was most concentrated.

The team’s work—“Four decades of Hawaiian monk seal entanglement data reveal the benefits of plastic debris removal”—is available online beginning September 26 and in print on September 27.

Read more about it in the UH News and the UH Mānoa News.

Related Link

https://www.hawaii.edu/news/2024/09/26/marine-debris-removal-benefits-hawaiian-monk-seals-ecosystems/