Coastal and Marine Pollution : Source to Sink, Mitigation and Management /

"Marine environments are generally understood as aquatic ecosystems with high contents of dissolved salts, including the open ocean and coastal ecosystems such as estuaries. According to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, the 'marine environment' is defined as "...

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Other Authors: Vithanage, Meththika (Editor), Samarasekara, Sameera M (Editor), James, Bryan D. (Editor), Reddy, Christopher M. (Editor)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons, 2025
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245 0 0 |a Coastal and Marine Pollution :  |b Source to Sink, Mitigation and Management /  |c Edited by Meththika Vithanage, Sameera M. Samarasekara, Bryan D. James, Christopher M. Reddy 
264 1 |a Hoboken, NJ :  |b John Wiley & Sons,  |c 2025 
264 4 |c ©2025 
300 |a xxix, 522 pages :  |b illustrations ;  |c 26 cm 
336 |a text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
337 |a unmediated  |b n  |2 rdamedia 
338 |a volume  |b nc  |2 rdacarrier 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references and index 
505 0 |a Overview of coastal and marine pollution : sources, impacts, and challenges -- Pollution from land-based sources : industrial and urban runoff -- "Marine pollution issues relating to shipping, ports and use of marine coatings" -- Offshore oil and gas operations : environmental impacts and mitigation methods -- Coastal and marine pollution from agricultural activities : fertilizers and pesticides -- Ocean warming, acidification, plastic pollution, and water quality deterioration; a multifaceted crisis unveiled -- Heavy metal pollution and historical legacies in coastal-marine environment -- "Marine pollution due to mariculture and fishing operations in Sri Lanka : impacts and mitigation strategies" -- Marine macro-litter : sources, abundance, impacts and solutions -- Nuclear and radioactive marine pollution and monitoring of radioactivity in oceans -- Coastal and marine pollution : source to sink, mitigation and management -- Underestimated threats : personal care products (PCPs) in marine and coastal environments -- Monitoring and assessment of coastal and marine pollution : methods and technologies -- Toxicological techniques for coastal and marine pollution monitoring -- Marine sediment remediation through tiered risk assessment approach -- Coastal and marine pollution : source to sink, mitigation and management -- Coastal and marine plastic pollution monitoring and control using remote sensing and artificial intelligence (AI) technologies -- Policy and governance approaches for coastal and marine pollution management -- X-press pearl disaster -- Container overboard in the Port of New Orleans, LA, USA : the response and cleanup of the 2020 Bianca pellet spill -- Unleashing potential : transcending marine pollution forecasts for a better future and critical thresholds -- Impacts of coastal and marine pollution on the blue economy : integrating blue finance perspectives -- Macro issues of microplastics : present status and future challenges 
520 |a "Marine environments are generally understood as aquatic ecosystems with high contents of dissolved salts, including the open ocean and coastal ecosystems such as estuaries. According to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, the 'marine environment' is defined as "the physical, chemical, geological and biological components, conditions and factors which interact and determine the productivity, state, condition, and quality of the marine ecosystem, the waters of the seas and the oceans and the airspace immediately above those waters, as well as the seabed and ocean floor and subsoil thereof" (Valencia and Akimoto, 2006). Coastal environments are described as transition zones where the terrestrial watersheds make close interactions with the open ocean and the atmosphere (Lavalle et al., 2011; Werner and Blanton, 2019). Accordingly, coastal environments include some of the most complex and dynamic ecosystems on earth such as estuaries, bays, coral and other biogenic reefs, shallow near-shore waters, tidal wetlands, mudflats, mangrove swamps, and saltmarshes (Cowie and Woulds, 2011; Cabral et al., 2019; Nunes and Leston, 2020)"--  |c Provided by publisher 
650 0 |a Marine pollution 
650 0 |a Coastal ecosystem health 
700 1 |a Vithanage, Meththika,  |e editor 
700 1 |a Samarasekara, Sameera M,  |e editor 
700 1 |a James, Bryan D.,  |e editor 
700 1 |a Reddy, Christopher M.,  |e editor 
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