4.7 Article

Plastic ingestion by fishing cats suggests trophic transfer in urban wetlands

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ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
卷 316, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.120694

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Fishing cat; Prionailurus viverrinus; Scat analysis; Sri Lanka; Urban wetlands; Freshwater plastic pollution

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Recent studies have found that plastic contamination is more severe in terrestrial and freshwater environments than in marine environments. However, the level of plastic pollution in urban wetlands and its impact on wildlife remains poorly understood. In a study of fishing cats in Colombo, Sri Lanka, researchers unexpectedly found plastic debris in 2.17% of the fecal samples collected. The presence of plastic in the samples suggests that these predators are consuming prey contaminated with plastic, highlighting the potential risk of plastic accumulation in wetland food webs.
Recent studies have suggested that plastic contamination in some terrestrial and freshwater environments is estimated to be greater than that detected in marine environments. Urban wetlands are prone to plastic pollution but levels of contamination in their wildlife are poorly quantified. We collected 276 fishing cat (Prionailurus viverrinus) scat samples in Colombo, Sri Lanka for a dietary study of urban fishing cats. We used traditional dietary analysis methodology to investigate the contents of the scats by washing, isolating, and identifying prey remains; while sorting prey remains of individual scats, we unexpectedly detected macroscopic (>1 mm) plastic debris in six (2.17%) of the samples. Across all scat samples, we detected low occurrences of microplastics (0.72%), mesoplastics (1.09%) and macroplastics (1.45%). All three plastic types were found in scats containing rodent remains, while meso-, and macroplastics were found in scats with avian remains, and micro-and mac-roplastics in scats containing freshwater fish remains. Given that felids are obligate generalist carnivores that eat live or recently dead prey and do not consume garbage, our findings suggest that trophic transfer of plastics occurred whereby fishing cats consumed prey contaminated with plastic. Although macroscopic plastic detection was low, our findings suggest that accumulation of plastics is occurring in wetland food webs, and plastic pollution in freshwater terrestrial systems could pose a risk to predators that do not directly consume plastics but inhabit contaminated environments.

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