4.7 Review

Impacts of Marine Plastic Pollution From Continental Coasts to Subtropical Gyres-Fish, Seabirds, and Other Vertebrates in the SE Pacific

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 5, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2018.00238

Keywords

anthropogenic marine debris; impacts; biota-litter interactions; entanglement; microplastic ingestion

Funding

  1. Chilean Millennium Initiative
  2. Comite Oceanografico Nacional (CONA) from Chile [CONA C21-15-029, CONA C22-16-11, CONA C21-15-113, CONA C22-16-06]
  3. FONDECYT [3150636]
  4. CONICYT Beca Doctorado Nacional [21151143]
  5. Beca Magister Nacional CONICYT from the Chilean Ministry of Education [22161894]
  6. Save Our Seas Foundation [361]

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Anthropogenic Marine Debris (AMD) in the SE Pacific has primarily local origins from land-based sources, including cities (coastal and inland), beach-goers, aquaculture, and fisheries. The low frequency of AMD colonized by oceanic biota (bryozoans, lepadid barnacles) suggests that most litter items from coastal waters of the Humboldt Current System (HCS) are pulled offshore into the South Pacific Subtropical Gyre (SPSG). The highest densities of floating micro- and macroplastics are reported from the SPSG. An extensive survey of photographic records, unpublished data, conference proceedings, and published studies revealed interactions with plastics for 97 species in the SE Pacific, including 20 species of fish, 5 sea turtles, 53 seabirds, and 19 marine mammals. Sea turtles are most affected by interactions with plastics, underlined by the fact that 4 of the 5 species suffer both from entanglement and ingestion. Reports gathered in this review suggest that interactions along the continental coast are mostly via entanglement. High frequencies of microplastic ingestion have been reported from planktivorous fish and seabirds inhabiting the oceanic waters and islands exposed to high densities of microplastics concentrated by oceanic currents in the SPSG. Our review also suggests that some species from the highly productive HCS face the risk of negative interactions with AMD, because food and plastic litter are concentrated in coastal front systems. In order to improve the conservation of marine vertebrates, especially of sea turtles, urgent measures of plastic reduction are needed.

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