0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

First sighting of a pelagic seabird entangled in a disposable COVID-19 facemask in the Mediterranean Sea

Mediterranean Marine Science 2023 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Georgios Karris, Ioannis Savva, ELEFTHERIOS KAKALIS, KYRIAKI BAIRAKTARIDOU, CHLOE ESPINOSA, Matthew Stephen SMITH, Petroula Botsidou, STAMATIOS MOSCHOUS, Marios-Dimitrios VOULGARIS, ELENI PEPPA, Panicos Panayides, HARIS HADJISTYLLIS, MARIOS IOSIFIDES

Summary

Researchers recorded the first documented case in the Mediterranean Basin of a pelagic seabird entangled in a disposable COVID-19 facemask, highlighting single-use personal protective equipment as an emerging and significant threat to seabird conservation.

Seabirds are increasingly recognized as important bio-indicators of marine ecosystems that are useful in assessing environmental disturbance on the marine biota. Over the period 2020-22 and during the first national systematic recording of the sea waters surrounding the Republic of Cyprus, we recorded the spatio-temporal presence, abundance and behaviour of seabirds using the ESAS (European Seabirds At Sea) methodology. Here we present the observation of an accidentally entangled pelagic seabird in COVID-19 material which to the best of our knowledge is the first incident in the Mediterranean Basin. The systematic recording of entangled marine birds in personal protective equipment (PPE) used to prevent COVID-19 transmission worldwide seems to be of crucial importance for one of the most important emerging threats for the conservation of seabirds at global scale.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Face masks related to COVID-19 in the beaches of the Moroccan Mediterranean: An emerging source of plastic pollution

Researchers monitored face mask litter on five tourist beaches along the Moroccan Mediterranean over five months, finding 321 masks (96% single-use) with higher densities on urban recreational beaches, identifying COVID-related masks as an emerging source of marine plastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Mortality of a juvenile Magellanic penguin (Spheniscus magellanicus, Spheniscidae) associated with the ingestion of a PFF-2 protective mask during the Covid-19 pandemic

Researchers reported the first documented case of a marine animal — a juvenile Magellanic penguin found dead on a Brazilian beach — killed by ingesting a discarded PFF-2 face mask, highlighting the underappreciated risk that COVID-19 macro-plastic waste poses to coastal wildlife beyond microplastic contamination.

Article Tier 2

Effects of masks on marine animals

Discarded COVID-19 face masks entering the ocean pose multiple threats to marine life, including entanglement, ingestion, and fragmentation into microplastic fibres. The paper outlines the scale of the problem and proposes policy and individual-behaviour responses, underscoring how pandemic-era single-use plastic waste created a new and rapid source of marine microplastic contamination.

Article Tier 2

The hidden cost of following currents: Microplastic ingestion in a planktivorous seabird

Researchers documented microplastic ingestion in Mediterranean storm petrels, finding that these planktivorous seabirds ingest microplastics while foraging in pelagic areas where plastic debris accumulates alongside their planktonic prey in ocean currents.

Article Tier 2

The effects of COVID-19 litter on animal life

Researchers documented the first recorded case of a fish entrapped in a COVID-19 medical glove during a canal clean-up in the Netherlands and reviewed other early cases of wildlife entanglement and ingestion of PPE waste, calling for urgent action to prevent pandemic-related plastic litter from harming wildlife.

Share this paper