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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

Marine plastics threaten giant Atlantic Marine Protected Areas

Current Biology 2018 94 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.
David K. A. Barnes, Simon A. Morley, James B. Bell, Paul E. Brewin, Katie Brigden, Martin A. Collins, Trevor Glass, William P. Goodall‐Copestake, Leeann Henry, Vladimir Laptikhovsky, Nils Piechaud, Anthony J. Richardson, Paul Rose, Chester J. Sands, A. Schofield, Rachael S. Shreeve, A. Small, Tammy Stamford, Beth Taylor

Summary

Researchers surveyed plastic pollution across remote UK Atlantic Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) and found beach debris increased more than tenfold over a decade, with plastics detected from the sea surface down to seamount depths. Plastic was found in organisms across the entire food web — from zooplankton to seabirds — indicating that MPA status alone cannot shield wildlife from plastic contamination.

There has been a recent shift in global perception of plastics in the environment, resulting in a call for greater action. Science and the popular media have highlighted plastic as an increasing stressor [1,2]. Efforts have been made to confer protected status to some remote locations, forming some of the world's largest Marine Protected Areas, including several UK overseas territories. We assessed plastic at these remote Atlantic Marine Protected Areas, surveying the shore, sea surface, water column and seabed, and found drastic changes from 2013-2018. Working from the RRS James Clark Ross at Ascension, St. Helena, Tristan da Cunha, Gough and the Falkland Islands (Figure 1A), we showed that marine debris on beaches has increased more than 10 fold in the past decade. Sea surface plastics have also increased, with in-water plastics occurring at densities of 0.1 items m-3; plastics on seabeds were observed at ≤ 0.01 items m-2. For the first time, beach densities of plastics at remote South Atlantic sites approached those at industrialised North Atlantic sites. This increase even occurs hundreds of meters down on seamounts. We also investigated plastic incidence in 2,243 animals (comprising 26 species) across remote South Atlantic oceanic food webs, ranging from plankton to seabirds. We found that plastics had been ingested by primary consumers (zooplankton) to top predators (seabirds) at high rates. These findings suggest that MPA status will not mitigate the threat of plastic proliferation to this rich, unique and threatened biodiversity.

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