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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. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Overview of global status of plastic presence in marine vertebrates

Global Change Biology 2020 118 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sergio López‐Martínez Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Sergio López‐Martínez Sergio López‐Martínez Marga L. Rivas, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Sergio López‐Martínez Sergio López‐Martínez Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Julianna Kadar, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Marga L. Rivas, Sergio López‐Martínez Marga L. Rivas, Marga L. Rivas, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Marga L. Rivas, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Marga L. Rivas, Marga L. Rivas, Marga L. Rivas, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Carmen Morales‐Caselles, Sergio López‐Martínez

Summary

A review of 112 studies on plastic ingestion by marine vertebrates (sea turtles, cetaceans, fish) found widespread occurrence across species and ocean regions, with methodological inconsistencies preventing reliable global comparisons and underscoring the need for standardized protocols.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The presence of plastic in the environment is generating impacts on all habitats and has become a major global problem in marine megafauna. Macroplastics can cause entanglement, ingestion and loss of suitable habitats. In addition to entanglement problems, there is evidence that plastics are entering the food web through ingestion by marine organisms, which could ultimately be affecting humans. Much of the available information on the impact of plastic in biota is scattered and disconnected due to the use of different methodologies. Here, we review the variety of approaches and protocols followed to assess macro- and microplastic ingestion in marine vertebrates such as sea turtles, cetaceans and fishes in order to offer a global overview of their current status. The analysis of 112 studies indicates the highest plastic ingestion in organisms collected in the Mediterranean and Northeast Indian Ocean with significant differences among plastic types ingested by different groups of animals, including differences in colour and the type of prevalent polymers. In sea turtles, the most prevalent types of plastics are white plastics (66.60%), fibres (54.54%) and LDPE polymer (39.09%); in cetaceans, white macro- and microplastics (38.31%), fibres (79.95%) and PA polymer (49.60%); and in fishes, transparent plastics (45.97%), fibres (66.71%) and polyester polymer (36.20%). Overall, clear fibre microplastics are likely the most predominant types ingested by marine megafauna around the globe.

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