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 Sign in to save

Occurrence of microplastics in pellets from the common kingfisher (Alcedo atthis) along the Ticino River, North Italy

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2020 66 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.
Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Alessandro Nessi, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Marco Parolini Alessandro Nessi, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Alessandro Nessi, Marco Parolini Nadia Santo, Anna Winkler, Nadia Santo, Anna Winkler, Diego Antonioli, Diego Antonioli, Nadia Santo, Anna Winkler, Nadia Santo, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Nadia Santo, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Alessandro Nessi, Nadia Santo, Nadia Santo, Nadia Santo, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Anna Winkler, Diego Antonioli, Diego Antonioli, Diego Antonioli, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Nadia Santo, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Michele Laus, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Michele Laus, Nadia Santo, Nadia Santo, Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Diego Antonioli, Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Paolo Tremolada, Michele Laus, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Michele Laus, Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini Marco Parolini

Summary

Researchers found microplastics in regurgitated pellets of the common kingfisher (Alcedo atthis) collected along the Ticino River in North Italy, examining 133 pellets between March and October 2019 to provide rare data on plastic ingestion by freshwater bird species.

Study Type Environmental

Previous research has reported avian plastic ingestion in marine bird species. Yet, while research attention on plastic pollution is shifting from marine to freshwater ecosystems, very few information on plastic ingestion is available for freshwater birds. Here, we examined the presence of microplastic in regurgitated pellets of the common kingfisher (Alcedo atthis) collected along the Ticino River (North Italy). In total, 133 kingfisher's pellets were examined between March and October 2019 from 54 transects along the river. Plastic elements were detected and identified by visual inspection followed by μ-FTIR and SEM-EDS. Overall, we found 12 (micro)plastics from at least three different polymers in 7.5% of the pellets. This study provides the first report of plastic uptake of this bird species. It highlights the importance of spectroscopic techniques in plastic monitoring studies in order to avoid misidentification of items found. Documenting the presence of plastic ingestion by top carnivores such as fish-eating birds is necessary to understand the pervasiveness and impact of (micro)plastic pollution in food webs of freshwater ecosystems.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper