Quantifying sublethal effects of plastics ingestion on marine wildlife is difficult, but key to understanding the ontogeny and population dynamics of affected species. We developed a method that overcomes the difficulties by modelling individual ontogeny under reduced energy intake and expenditure caused by debris ingestion. The predicted ontogeny is combined with a population dynamics model to identify ecological breakpoints: cessation of reproduction or negative population growth. Exemplifying this approach on loggerhead turtles, we find that between 3% and 25% of plastics in digestive contents causes a 2.5–20% reduction in perceived food abundance and total available energy, resulting in a 10–15% lower condition index and 10% to 88% lowe...
Plastic pollution of oceans is a global issue. Sea turtle debris ingestion has been widely documente...
Plastic debris is entering into the marine environment at an accelerating rate, now becoming one of ...
Marine debris is a growing problem for wildlife, and has been documented to affect more than 267 spe...
Quantifying sublethal effects of plastics ingestion on marine wildlife is difficult, but key to unde...
peer-reviewedPollution from anthropogenic marine debris, particularly buoyant plastics, is ubiquitou...
Plastic debris is now ubiquitous in the marine environment affecting a wide range of taxa, from micr...
Plastic debris is now ubiquitous in the marine environment affecting a wide range of taxa, from micr...
Plastic in the marine environment is a growing environmental issue. Sea turtles are at significant r...
The ingestion of plastic by marine turtles is now reported for all species. Small juvenile turtles (...
Plastic marine debris pollution is rapidly becoming one of the critical environmental concerns facin...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Nature Research via the DOI in this recordD...
The ingestion of plastic by marine turtles is now reported for all species. Small juvenile turtles (...
Marine debris is a growing problem for wildlife, and has been documented to affect more than 267 spe...
Juvenile oceanic-stage sea turtles are particularly vulnerable to the increasing quantity of plastic...
Plastic pollution of oceans is a global issue. Sea turtle debris ingestion has been widely documente...
Plastic debris is entering into the marine environment at an accelerating rate, now becoming one of ...
Marine debris is a growing problem for wildlife, and has been documented to affect more than 267 spe...
Quantifying sublethal effects of plastics ingestion on marine wildlife is difficult, but key to unde...
peer-reviewedPollution from anthropogenic marine debris, particularly buoyant plastics, is ubiquitou...
Plastic debris is now ubiquitous in the marine environment affecting a wide range of taxa, from micr...
Plastic debris is now ubiquitous in the marine environment affecting a wide range of taxa, from micr...
Plastic in the marine environment is a growing environmental issue. Sea turtles are at significant r...
The ingestion of plastic by marine turtles is now reported for all species. Small juvenile turtles (...
Plastic marine debris pollution is rapidly becoming one of the critical environmental concerns facin...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Nature Research via the DOI in this recordD...
The ingestion of plastic by marine turtles is now reported for all species. Small juvenile turtles (...
Marine debris is a growing problem for wildlife, and has been documented to affect more than 267 spe...
Juvenile oceanic-stage sea turtles are particularly vulnerable to the increasing quantity of plastic...
Plastic pollution of oceans is a global issue. Sea turtle debris ingestion has been widely documente...
Plastic debris is entering into the marine environment at an accelerating rate, now becoming one of ...
Marine debris is a growing problem for wildlife, and has been documented to affect more than 267 spe...