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Marine & Wildlife
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Plastic ingestion and trophic transfer between Easter Island flying fish (Cheilopogon rapanouiensis) and yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) from Rapa Nui (Easter Island)
Environmental Pollution2018
131 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 40
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Nicolas C. Ory,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Catherine Chagnon,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Joana Antunes,
Martín Thiel
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Martín Thiel
Joana Antunes,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Catherine Chagnon,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Joana Antunes,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Joana Lia Ferreira,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Joana Antunes,
Joana Antunes,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Joana Antunes,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Joana Antunes,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Joana Antunes,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Nicolas C. Ory,
Martín Thiel
Nicolas C. Ory,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Paula Sobral,
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Martín Thiel
Summary
Researchers documented plastic ingestion in both Easter Island flying fish and yellowfin tuna from Rapa Nui, finding evidence of trophic transfer of plastic fragments from flying fish prey to tuna predators and demonstrating plastic contamination even in this remote Pacific island ecosystem.
Millimetre-sized fragments have been documented in many fish species, but their transfer through food webs is still poorly understood. Here we quantified and described plastic fragments in the digestive tracts of 43 Easter Island flying fish (Cheilopogon rapanouiensis) and 50 yellowfin tunas (Thunnus albacares) from coastal waters around Rapa Nui (Easter Island) in the South Pacific subtropical gyre, and of fish preyed upon by T. albacares. Overall, seven C. rapanouiensis (16%) individuals had ingested microplastics, most of which resembled the common planktonic prey of the fish. One microplastic was found in the gut of a fish ingested by a tuna, which indicates that trophic transfer may occur between tuna and prey. A single T. albacares (2%) had ingested five mesoplastics (15.2-26.3 mm) that were probably not mistaken for prey items, but rather accidentally ingested during foraging on fish prey. The absence of microplastics in T. albacares suggests that such small particles, if transferred from the prey, do not accumulate in the relatively large digestive tract of large predators. On the other hand, larger plastic items may accumulate in the gut of tunas, to which they may induce deleterious effects that still need to be examined. However, only a small portion of the fish had ingested mesoplastics. The results of this study suggest that microplastic contamination is not an immediate threat to large predatory fish, such as T. albacares, along the coast of Easter Island within the South Pacific subtropical gyre.