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Plastic Ingestion in Post-hatchling Sea Turtles: Assessing a Major Threat in Florida Near Shore Waters

Frontiers in Marine Science 2020 57 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Catherine B. Eastman, Todd Z. Osborne, Jessica Farrell, Liam Whitmore, Catherine B. Eastman, David J. Duffy Devon Rollinson Ramia, Devon Rollinson Ramia, Rachel Thomas, Rachel Thomas, Jenifer Prine, Jenifer Prine, Scott F. Eastman, Scott F. Eastman, Todd Z. Osborne, Mark Q. Martindale, David J. Duffy

Summary

Plastic fragments were found in the digestive tracts of 93% of stranded juvenile loggerhead sea turtles examined in Florida, with up to 287 fragments and a plastic-to-body weight ratio as high as 1.23%. The high ingestion rates in animals this young suggest that plastic pollution poses a serious threat to sea turtle survival from the earliest life stages.

Body Systems

Pollution from anthropogenic marine debris, particularly buoyant plastics, is ubiquitous across marine ecosystems. Due to the persistent nature of plastics in the environment, their buoyancy characteristics, degradation dynamics, and ability to mimic the behavior of natural prey, there exists significant opportunity for marine organisms to ingest these man-made materials. In this study we examined gastrointestinal (GI) tracts of 42 post-hatchling loggerhead (Caretta caretta) sea turtles stranded in Northeast Florida. Necropsies revealed abundant numbers of plastic fragments ranging from 0.36 mm to 12.39 mm in size (length), recovered from the GI tracts of 39 of the 42 animals (92.86%), with GI burdens ranging from 0-287 fragments with a mass of up to 0.33 g per turtle. Post-hatchlings weighed from 16.0-47.59 g yielding a plastic to body weight percentage of up to 1.23%. Several types of plastic fragments were isolated, but hard fragments and sheet plastic were the most common type, while the dominant frequency of fragment color was white. Fragment size and abundance mixed with natural gut contents suggests significant negative health consequences from ingestion in animals at this life stage. Gaining greater insight into the prevalence of plastic ingestion, the types of plastic and the physiological effects of plastic consumption by multiple life-stages of sea turtles will aid the prioritization of mitigation efforts for the growing marine debris problem. This report demonstrates that plastic ingestion is a critical issue for marine turtles from the earliest stages of life.

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