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Assessing plastic ingestion in the White stork (Ciconia ciconia) through regurgitated pellets

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2025 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Pilar Fernández Hernando, Elena Ramos‐Elvira, Alejandro López‐García, Rosa Marı́a Garcinuño Martı́nez José I. Aguirre, José I. Aguirre, Luis F. Osorio, Pilar Fernández Hernando, Rosa Marı́a Garcinuño Martı́nez Irene Colino‐Freire, Rosa Marı́a Garcinuño Martı́nez Pilar Fernández Hernando, Pilar Fernández Hernando, Rosa Marı́a Garcinuño Martı́nez Pilar Fernández Hernando, Pilar Fernández Hernando, Rosa Marı́a Garcinuño Martı́nez Pilar Fernández Hernando, Pilar Fernández Hernando, Rosa Marı́a Garcinuño Martı́nez Pilar Fernández Hernando, Alejandro López‐García, Pilar Fernández Hernando, Alejandro López‐García, José I. Aguirre, Pilar Fernández Hernando, Pilar Fernández Hernando, Rosa Marı́a Garcinuño Martı́nez

Summary

Researchers collected and analyzed regurgitated pellets from a white stork colony in central Spain to assess plastic and microplastic ingestion levels and their relationship to landfill use. About 3.44% of pellet content consisted of plastic, confirming that storks feeding at landfills ingest meaningful quantities of plastic materials, with chemical composition analysis identifying the polymer types involved.

Pollution is one of the main factors that threaten biodiversity nowadays. Plastic waste is a global problem which impacts not only on the marine environment but also on the terrestrial one. Great amounts of this kind of refuse are compiled in landfills, where lots of avian species feed. In contrast to seabirds research, there are limited studies that have considered how plastic is being ingested by land birds even when they are being affected both physically and at an endocrine level. We tried to assess the number of plastics and microplastics ingested by individuals of a White stork (Ciconia ciconia) colony in central Spain by collecting regurgitated pellets. The chemical composition of the elements was determined, as well as the relation between the amount of ingested plastic by individuals and their use of a landfill. Our results show that 3.44% of the pellet was formed by plastic (n = 50). Polyethylene, polystyrene, polypropylene and PET were the most abundant polymers, all of them being potentially problematic to the organism according to the literature. Each polymer was identified by Fourier transform infrared attenuated total reflectance spectroscopy (FTIR-ATR). We observed that the total amount of ingested plastics was stable along the use of the landfill, meaning White storks obtained plastic not only from anthropogenic sources but also from natural areas, indicating its high rate of pollution. Our study remarks the importance of addressing plastic ingestion in White storks as well as other terrestrial species, not only to understand the possible damage to the population but also to the whole ecosystem.

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