4.7 Article

Plastic contamination of a Galapagos Island (Ecuador) and the relative risks to native marine species

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 789, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147704

Keywords

Microplastic; Conservation tool; Invertebrate ingestion; Marine litter; Rapid assessment

Funding

  1. Galapagos Conservation Trust
  2. Woodspring Trust
  3. Ralph Brown Expedition grant from the Royal Geographical Society
  4. NERC Impact Award
  5. Global Challenges Research Fund Networking Grant
  6. National Environment Research Council [NE/S003975/1]

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The study in Ecuador's Galapagos Islands revealed the presence and potential harm of plastic pollution in the marine ecosystem, highlighting the urgent need for monitoring and mitigation efforts for 27 vulnerable marine vertebrate species.
Ecuador's Galapagos Islands and their unique biodiversity are a global conservation priority. We explored the presence, composition and environmental drivers of plastic contamination across the marine ecosystem at an island scale, investigated uptake in marine invertebrates and designed a systematic priority scoring analysis to identify the most vulnerable vertebrate species. Beach contamination varied by site (macroplastic 0-0.66 items.m(-2), microplastics 0-448.8 particles.m(-2) or 0-74.6 particles.kg(-1)), with high plastic accumulation on east-facing beaches that are influenced by the Humboldt Current. Local littering and waste management leakages accounted for just 2% of macroplastic. Microplastics (including anthropogenic cellulosics) were ubiquitous but in low concentrations in benthic sediments (6.7-86.7 particles.kg(-1)) and surface seawater (0.04-0.89 particles.m(-3)), with elevated concentrations in the harbour suggesting some local input. Microplastics were present in all seven marine invertebrate species examined, found in 52% of individuals (n = 123) confirming uptake of microplastics in the Galapagos marine food web. Priority scoring analysis combining species distribution information, IUCN Red List conservation status and literature evidence of harm from entanglement and ingestion of plastics in similar species identified 27 marine vertebrates in need of urgent, targeted monitoring and mitigation including pinnipeds. seabirds, turtles and sharks. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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