Soliveres, Santiago, Casado-Coy, Nuria, Martinez-Perez, Jose Emilio, Sanz-Lázaro, Carlos Anthropogenic and environmental factors partly co-determine the level, composition and temporal variation of beach debris Journal of Hazardous Materials. 2024, 468: 133843. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.133843 URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/140871 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.133843 ISSN: 0304-3894 (Print) Abstract: The accumulation of human-derived waste on our coasts is an escalating phenomenon, yet the relative importance and potential interactions among its main drivers are not fully understood. We used citizen-science standardized collections to investigate how anthropogenic and environmental factors influence the level, composition, and temporal variation of beach debris. An average of 58 kg and 803 items/100 m, dominated by single-use items of land (rather than sea) origin, were collected in the 881 beaches sampled. Interactions between anthropogenic and environmental factors (e.g., human use × beach substrate) were the strongest predictors of beach debris, accounting for 34% of the variance explained in its amount and composition. Beach debris showed a highly stochastic temporal variation (adjusted R2 = 0.05), partly determined by interactions between different local and landscape anthropogenic pressures. Our results show that both environmental and anthropogenic factors (at the local and landscape scale) co-determine the level and composition of beach debris. We emphasize the potential of citizen-science to inform environmental policy, showing that land-originated single-use items dominate beach debris, and the importance of considering their multiple anthropogenic and environmental drivers to improve our low predictive power regarding their spatio-temporal distribution. Keywords:Citizen science, Marine litter, Marine pollution, Protected areas, Plastic pollution Elsevier info:eu-repo/semantics/article