Impacts of debris on marine fauna occur throughout the marine ecosystems, with adverse impacts documented on over 1,400 species; impacts can be divided into those arising from entanglement, and those from ingestion. Ingestion of, and entanglement in, debris has been documented in over 60% of all cetacean species. Seabirds are also impacted by debris predominately through entanglement and ingestion, with the number of species negatively impacted increasing from 138 to 174 over the past two decades. In the marine environment, cetaceans and seabirds are widely regarded as reliable sentinels due to their position near the top of the marine food web, conspicuous nature, and reliance on marine resources; for this reason, this paper is focused on ...
Uncounted, and usually unobserved, numbers of pinnipeds find themselves entangled in lost fishing ge...
Anthropogenic Marine Debris (AMD) in the SE Pacific has primarily local origins from land-based sour...
Increasing amounts of anthropogenic debris enter the ocean because of mismanagement in coastal commu...
Impacts of debris on marine fauna occur throughout the marine ecosystems, with adverse impacts docum...
Plastic pollution is a ubiquitous and increasing issue concerning the marine environment. It has bee...
Antarctica, and the Southern Ocean, is considered to be the last ‘untouched wilderness’ on Earth. Ye...
In this review we report new findings concerning interaction between marine debris and wildlife. Del...
Plastic pollution in the ocean is a global concern; concentrations reach 580,000 pieces per km(2) an...
Plastics and other marine debris have been found in the gastrointestinal tracts of cetaceans, includ...
Procellariiform seabirds are among the worlds most threatened species; with over half of species in ...
Marine debris is a growing threat to hundreds of marine animal species. To understand theconsequence...
The global distribution and presence of plastic, at all levels of the water column, has made plastic...
Plastic pollution has become one of the largest environmental challenges we currently face. The Unit...
Uncounted, and usually unobserved, numbers of pinnipeds find themselves entangled in lost fishing ge...
Marine litter has become a pervasive pollution problem affecting all of the world's seas. It is wide...
Uncounted, and usually unobserved, numbers of pinnipeds find themselves entangled in lost fishing ge...
Anthropogenic Marine Debris (AMD) in the SE Pacific has primarily local origins from land-based sour...
Increasing amounts of anthropogenic debris enter the ocean because of mismanagement in coastal commu...
Impacts of debris on marine fauna occur throughout the marine ecosystems, with adverse impacts docum...
Plastic pollution is a ubiquitous and increasing issue concerning the marine environment. It has bee...
Antarctica, and the Southern Ocean, is considered to be the last ‘untouched wilderness’ on Earth. Ye...
In this review we report new findings concerning interaction between marine debris and wildlife. Del...
Plastic pollution in the ocean is a global concern; concentrations reach 580,000 pieces per km(2) an...
Plastics and other marine debris have been found in the gastrointestinal tracts of cetaceans, includ...
Procellariiform seabirds are among the worlds most threatened species; with over half of species in ...
Marine debris is a growing threat to hundreds of marine animal species. To understand theconsequence...
The global distribution and presence of plastic, at all levels of the water column, has made plastic...
Plastic pollution has become one of the largest environmental challenges we currently face. The Unit...
Uncounted, and usually unobserved, numbers of pinnipeds find themselves entangled in lost fishing ge...
Marine litter has become a pervasive pollution problem affecting all of the world's seas. It is wide...
Uncounted, and usually unobserved, numbers of pinnipeds find themselves entangled in lost fishing ge...
Anthropogenic Marine Debris (AMD) in the SE Pacific has primarily local origins from land-based sour...
Increasing amounts of anthropogenic debris enter the ocean because of mismanagement in coastal commu...