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.
Sign in to save
Microplastics in gentoo penguins from the Antarctic region
Scientific Reports2019
262 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.
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Phil Trathan
Phil Trathan,
Filipa Bessa,
Claire M. Waluda,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Claire M. Waluda,
Vanessa Otero,
João Carlos Marques,
Paula Sobral,
Norman Ratcliffe,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Vanessa Otero,
Vanessa Otero,
Vanessa Otero,
Vanessa Otero,
Vanessa Otero,
Vanessa Otero,
Vanessa Otero,
Vanessa Otero,
Claire M. Waluda,
Claire M. Waluda,
Claire M. Waluda,
Claire M. Waluda,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Claire M. Waluda,
Paula Sobral,
João Carlos Marques,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Claire M. Waluda,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Claire M. Waluda,
Vanessa Otero,
Vanessa Otero,
Vanessa Otero,
João Carlos Marques,
João Carlos Marques,
João Carlos Marques,
João Carlos Marques,
João Carlos Marques,
Claire M. Waluda,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Norman Ratcliffe,
Claire M. Waluda,
Claire M. Waluda,
Paula Sobral,
Claire M. Waluda,
Claire M. Waluda,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Vanessa Otero,
Paula Sobral,
Phil Trathan,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Phil Trathan
João Carlos Marques,
João Carlos Marques,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
José C. Xavier,
José C. Xavier,
José C. Xavier,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Filipa Bessa,
Claire M. Waluda,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Claire M. Waluda,
José C. Xavier,
José C. Xavier,
Phil Trathan,
Phil Trathan
Summary
Microplastic particles were found in the digestive tracts of gentoo penguins sampled from the Antarctic region, adding to evidence that even the remote Southern Ocean ecosystem is contaminated with plastic pollution. The study raises concerns about how microplastic ingestion may affect the health and foraging efficiency of Antarctic seabirds.
There is growing evidence that microplastic pollution (<5 mm in size) is now present in virtually all marine ecosystems, even in remote areas, such as the Arctic and the Antarctic. Microplastics have been found in water and sediments of the Antarctic but little is known of their ingestion by higher predators and mechanisms of their entry into Antarctic marine food webs. The goal of this study was to assess the occurrence of microplastics in a top predator, the gentoo penguin Pygoscelis papua from the Antarctic region (Bird Island, South Georgia and Signy Island, South Orkney Islands) and hence assess the potential for microplastic transfer through Antarctic marine food webs. To achieve this, the presence of microplastics in scats (as a proof of ingestion) was investigated to assess the viability of a non-invasive approach for microplastic analyses in Antarctic penguins. A total of 80 penguin scats were collected and any microplastics they contained were extracted. A total of 20% of penguin scats from both islands contained microplastics, consisting mainly of fibers and fragments with different sizes and polymer composition (mean abundance of microplastics: 0.23 ± 0.53 items individual scat, comprising seven different polymers), which were lower values than those found for seabirds in other regions worldwide. No significant differences in microplastic numbers in penguin scats between the two regions were detected. These data highlight the need for further assessment of the levels of microplastics in this sensitive region of the planet, specifically studies on temporal trends and potential effects on penguins and other organisms in the Antarctic marine food web.