Authors
Erika R Holland, Mark L Mallory, Dave Shutler
Publication date
2016/11/15
Journal
Science of the Total Environment
Volume
571
Pages
251-258
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Plastics in marine environments are a global environmental issue. Plastic ingestion is associated with a variety of deleterious health effects in marine wildlife, and is a focus of much international research and monitoring. However, little research has focused on ramifications of plastic debris for freshwater organisms, despite marine and freshwater environments often having comparable plastic concentrations. We quantified plastic and other anthropogenic debris in 350 individuals of 17 freshwater and one marine bird species collected across Canada. We determined freshwater birds' anthropogenic debris ingestion rates to be 11.1% across all species studied. This work establishes that plastics and other anthropogenic debris are a genuine concern for management of the health of freshwater ecosystems, and provides a baseline for the prevalence of plastic and other anthropogenic debris ingestion in freshwater birds …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ER Holland, ML Mallory, D Shutler - Science of the Total Environment, 2016