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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 Sign in to save

High incidence of plastic debris in Andean condors from remote areas: Evidence for marine-terrestrial trophic transfer

Environmental Pollution 2022 16 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Víctor Gamarra-Toledo, Pablo I. Plaza, Yuri A. Peña, Pierina A. Bermejo, Juan Carlos López‐Acosta, Gonzalo L. Cano, Santiago Barreto, Sandra Cáceres-Medina, Sergio A. Lambertucci

Summary

Researchers analyzed regurgitated pellets from Andean condors in two remote Peruvian regions and found plastic debris in a high proportion of individuals, including areas far from direct human activity. The findings suggest marine-sourced plastic travels to high-altitude terrestrial ecosystems via the food chain, with condors ingesting plastic through their marine mammal prey.

Plastic pollution is an alarming environmental problem affecting diverse species worldwide. Scavenging birds are currently exposed to plastic due to contamination of their food sources. Here, we evaluated the ingestion of plastic by a threatened top scavenger, the Andean condor (Vultur gryphus), and the potential origin of the plastic. We analyzed the biotic (organic items from the diet) and abiotic (synthetic material) composition of regurgitated pellets in two remote areas of Peru associated with protected areas: a marine-coastal region and an Andean region. Condors consume mainly Pinnipeds and South American camelids in the marine-coastal region, and camelids and livestock in the Andean region. We found different sizes and varieties of plastic debris, with a very high frequency of occurrence (85-100%) of microplastics in pellets of both areas studied. The occurrence of microplastics differed between sites; although very high in general, the rate of occurrence and density were higher in the marine-coastal region. We also confirmed that carcasses consumed by condors in both study areas were contaminated with plastic. Therefore, plastic in Andean condors is most probably acquired through the food web in both the marine and terrestrial environments. Andean condors from Peru are highly contaminated with plastic, which may affect their health, population dynamics, and conservation. Moreover, as condors are apex scavengers, our results highlight the fact that plastic pollution in remote areas of Peru is present at different levels of the food web and in the environment. Urgent Action should be taken to reduce environmental contamination with this hazardous pollutant.

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