Marine Debris on San Juan Island Beaches: Argyle Spit and Eagle Cove
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Nair, Priya
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Abstract
Marine debris (MD) (plastics, glass, rope, human waste, etc. that made its way into the ocean) is
polluting the ocean and the shores across the world. This is a significant ecological concern due
to its negative impacts on wildlife. This study focuses on marine debris on the shores of Argyle
Spit and Eagle Cove, comparing the intertidal zonations, high, medium, and low, with the
abundance of debris in those zones. Argyle Spit had a significant p-value when finding the most
abundance of MD in the high-intertidal. Argyle Spit had a high amount of debris in the
high-intertidal, but Eagle Cove did not have a significant enough p-value to say whether MD was
most abundant in the high-intertidal. This is important because more MD in the high-intertidal
zone can tell us how different species living in these intertidal zones at those two beaches may be
more likely to interact with the MD. This can look like seabirds, sand fleas, or other
high-intertidal organisms living in the same environment as MD and ingesting or absorbing the
fragments and/or chemicals when exposed.
