4.8 Article

Plastic ingestion by marine fish is widespread and increasing

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 27, 期 10, 页码 2188-2199

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15533

关键词

evolutionary trap; marine fisheries; microplastics; plastic pollution

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [PRFB 1906332]
  2. National Geographic Society [EC-53352R-18]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Research has found that hundreds of marine fish species worldwide have ingested plastic debris, with ingestion rates increasing over time. The ingestion of plastic by marine fish is influenced by geographical, ecological, and behavioral factors, pointing to species and regions in urgent need of further study.
Plastic pollution has pervaded almost every facet of the biosphere, yet we lack an understanding of consumption risk by marine species at the global scale. To address this, we compile data from research documenting plastic debris ingestion by marine fish, totaling 171,774 individuals of 555 species. Overall, 386 marine fish species have ingested plastic debris including 210 species of commercial importance. However, 148 species studied had no records of plastic consumption, suggesting that while this evolutionary trap is widespread, it is not yet universal. Across all studies that accounted for microplastics, the incidence rate of plastic ingested by fish was 26%. Over the last decade this incidence has doubled, increasing by 2.4 +/- 0.4% per year. This is driven both by increasing detection of smaller sized particles as a result of improved methodologies, as well as an increase in fish consuming plastic. Further, we investigated the role of geographic, ecological, and behavioral factors in the ingestion of plastic across species. These analyses revealed that the abundance of plastic in surface waters was positively correlated to plastic ingestion. Demersal species are more likely to ingest plastic in shallow waters; in contrast, pelagic species were most likely to consume plastic below the mixed layer. Mobile predatory species had the highest likelihood to ingest plastic; similarly, we found a positive relationship between trophic level and plastic ingestion. We also find evidence that surface ingestion-deep sea egestion of microplastics by mesopelagic myctophids is likely a key mechanism for the export of microplastics from the surface ocean to the seafloor, a sink for marine debris. These results elucidate the role of ecology and biogeography underlying plastic ingestion by marine fish and point toward species and regions in urgent need of study.

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