Abstract. Pollution of the world’s oceans affects a wide variety of marine organisms and raises major conservation concerns. Ingestion of plastic debris has increased since the 1970s, particularly among the Procellariiformes, resulting in a range of lethal and sub-lethal side effects. Plastic loads (grams of plastic per bird) of adult Short-tailed Shearwaters (Ardenna tenuirostris) are well known from research in the northern hemisphere, but the amount of plastic ingested by their offspring has yet to be quantified. In this study, the stomach contents of fledgling Short-tailed Shearwaters on Phillip Island, Victoria, were analysed for plastic particles. All birds sampled contained plastic, averaging 7.6 particles per bird. The mean mass of ...
Plastic ingestion by wedge-tailed shearwaters (WTS) nesting at near-shore and offshore sites along t...
Plastic is currently the most common anthropogenic material in the marine environment. Knowledge on ...
Seabirds ingest plastic particles floating on the surface of the world's oceans. The birds can inges...
Plastic pollution is a significant problem in all oceans of the world and accounts for up to 90% of ...
Annual rates of plastic production have been increasing rapidly since the 1950s. Inadequate or impro...
Numerous species of seabirds have been shown to ingest anthropogenic debris, but few studies have co...
The world's oceans are under increasing pressure from anthropogenic activities, including significan...
International audienceWe investigated seabird plastic ingestion in the western Indian Ocean by analy...
The world's oceans are under increasing pressure from anthropogenic activities, including significan...
Plastic debris is ubiquitous in the marine environment, and seabirds are among the most impacted ma...
We present the first evidence of ingestion of plastic by seabirds from the southern Great Barrier Re...
The population of Flesh-footed Shearwaters (Puffinus carneipes) on Lord Howe Island, Australia, has ...
International audienceThe accumulation of plastic pollutants in marine environments has many adverse...
Seabirds ingest plastic particles floating on the surface of the world's oceans. The birds can ...
Plastic debris is ubiquitous in the marine environment, and seabirds are among the most impacted ma...
Plastic ingestion by wedge-tailed shearwaters (WTS) nesting at near-shore and offshore sites along t...
Plastic is currently the most common anthropogenic material in the marine environment. Knowledge on ...
Seabirds ingest plastic particles floating on the surface of the world's oceans. The birds can inges...
Plastic pollution is a significant problem in all oceans of the world and accounts for up to 90% of ...
Annual rates of plastic production have been increasing rapidly since the 1950s. Inadequate or impro...
Numerous species of seabirds have been shown to ingest anthropogenic debris, but few studies have co...
The world's oceans are under increasing pressure from anthropogenic activities, including significan...
International audienceWe investigated seabird plastic ingestion in the western Indian Ocean by analy...
The world's oceans are under increasing pressure from anthropogenic activities, including significan...
Plastic debris is ubiquitous in the marine environment, and seabirds are among the most impacted ma...
We present the first evidence of ingestion of plastic by seabirds from the southern Great Barrier Re...
The population of Flesh-footed Shearwaters (Puffinus carneipes) on Lord Howe Island, Australia, has ...
International audienceThe accumulation of plastic pollutants in marine environments has many adverse...
Seabirds ingest plastic particles floating on the surface of the world's oceans. The birds can ...
Plastic debris is ubiquitous in the marine environment, and seabirds are among the most impacted ma...
Plastic ingestion by wedge-tailed shearwaters (WTS) nesting at near-shore and offshore sites along t...
Plastic is currently the most common anthropogenic material in the marine environment. Knowledge on ...
Seabirds ingest plastic particles floating on the surface of the world's oceans. The birds can inges...