ABSTRACT
Abundance, composition, and distribution of macro-litter found on the seafloor of the Strait of Sicily between 10 and 800 m depth has been studied using data collected by bottom trawl surveys MEDITS from 2015 to 2019. Three waste categories based on the items use were considered: single-use, fishing-related and generic-use. Over 600 sampling sites, just 14% of these were litter-free. The five-years average density of seafloor litter was 79.6 items/km2 and ranged between 46.8 in 2019 and 118.1 items/km2 in 2015. The predominant waste type was plastic (58% of all items). Regardless of material type, single-use items were a dominant (60% of items) and widespread (79% of hauls) fraction of litter with a mean density of 48.4 items/km2. Fishing-related items accounted for 12% of total litter items. Percentage of dirty hauls and litter density increased with depth. Analysis of the relation density-depth indicates a progressive increase of litter density beyond depth values situated within the interval 234-477 m depending on the litter category. A significant decrease in litter density by categories was observed over the period. Patterns of spatial distribution at the higher depths (200-80 0m) resulted stable over the years. Density hotspots of fishing-related items were found where the fishing activity that uses fish aggregating devices (FADs) is practised and in the proximity of rocky banks. Single-use and generic-use objects densities were greater on the seafloor along main maritime routes than other areas. Comparisons between the percentage of hauls littered with anthropic waste from the mid-1990s against those in 2018-19 highlighted an increase of about 10.8% and 15.3% for single-use items and fishing-related items respectively, and a decrease of 18.6% for generic-use items. This study provides a snapshot of the current situation of littering in the central Mediterranean Sea and represents a solid baseline against which the effectiveness of current and future mitigation strategies of the litter impact on marine environment can be measured.
Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring , Waste Products/analysis , Animals , Mediterranean Sea , Plastics , SicilyABSTRACT
Anti-single-stranded(ss)DNA antibodies were searched for by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in the serum of 202 outpatients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and 135 healthy subjects to investigate their prevalence in the serum of patients with type 2 diabetes and their relationship with the presence of vascular complications. Of the 202 patients 128 had vascular complications. Anti-ssDNA antibodies were observed to be significantly more frequent in the serum of patients with vascular complications (33.6%) and in particular in patients with overt nephropathy (50%) than in patients without complications (6.7%) or controls (6.7%). Anti-ssDNA antibodies have been previously described in patients with type 1 diabetes before clinical evidence of vascular disease and their cross-reactivity with a variety of anionic biological molecules or cells, i.e. platelets and endothelial cells, assessed. It seems not unreasonable that these auto-antibodies detected in patients with type 2 diabetes could be of importance in the pathogenesis or progression of angiopathy.