Department of Geological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa 35487, USA.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Indonesia, Depok 16424, Indonesia.
Mar Pollut Bull. 2021 Oct;171:112689. doi: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112689. Epub 2021 Jul 10.
Indonesia, the world's largest archipelagic country and the fourth most populated nation, has struggled with coastal water pollution in the last decades. With the increasing population in coastal urban cities, more land-based pollutants are transported to the coastal water and adversely affected the tropical ecosystems. This paper provides an overview of anthropogenic pollutant studies in Indonesian coastal water and ecosystems from 1986 to 2021. Nutrients, heavy metals, organic pollutants, and plastic debris are the most-studied contaminants. We found that 82%, 54% and 50% of the studies exceeding nutrients, heavy metals, and organic pollutants standard limit, respectively; thus, indicating poor water quality status in part of Indonesian coastal water. The coral reef ecosystems is found to be the most sensitive to anthropogenic disturbance. The potential effect of climate change, new coastal pollution hotspots in eastern Indonesia, marine anthropogenic sources, legacy/emerging pollutants, and the need for research related to the biological contamination, are discussed for future opportunities.
印度尼西亚是世界上最大的群岛国家和第四大人口大国,在过去几十年里一直在努力应对沿海水污染问题。随着沿海城市人口的增加,更多的陆源污染物被输送到沿海水域,对热带生态系统造成了不利影响。本文概述了 1986 年至 2021 年印度尼西亚沿海水域和生态系统中人为污染物的研究情况。营养物质、重金属、有机污染物和塑料碎片是研究最多的污染物。我们发现,82%、54%和 50%的研究分别超过了营养物质、重金属和有机污染物的标准限值,这表明印度尼西亚部分沿海地区的水质状况不佳。珊瑚礁生态系统被发现对人为干扰最敏感。本文还讨论了气候变化的潜在影响、印度尼西亚东部新的沿海污染热点、海洋人为污染源、遗留/新兴污染物以及与生物污染相关的研究需求,以期为未来的研究提供机会。