Fuente: UBC Public Affairs » Media Release
  Expuesto el: miércoles, 04 de julio de 2012 14:00
  Autor: brianlin
  Asunto: Seabirds study shows plastic pollution reaching surprising  levels off coast of Pacific Northwest
| Plastic pollution off the    northwest coast of North America is reaching the level of the notoriously    polluted North Sea, according to a new study led by a researcher at the    University of British Columbia. The study, published    online in the journal Marine    Pollution Bulletin, examined stomach contents of beached    northern fulmars on the coasts of British Columbia, Canada, and the states of    Washington and Oregon, U.S.A. “Like the canary in the    coal mine, northern fulmars are sentinels of plastic pollution in our    oceans,” says Stephanie Avery-Gomm, the study’s lead author and a graduate    student in UBC’s Department of Zoology. “Their stomach content provides a    ‘snapshot’ sample of plastic pollution from a large area of the northern    Pacific Ocean.” Northern fulmars forage    exclusively at sea and retain ingested plastics for a long period of time,    making them ideal indicators for marine littering. Analysis of beached    fulmars has been used to monitor plastic pollution in the North Sea since the    1980s. The latest findings, when compared to previous similar studies,    indicate a substantial increase in plastic pollution over the past four    decades. The research group    performed necropsies on 67 beached northern fulmars and found that 92.5 per    cent had plastics – such as twine, Styrofoam and candy wrappers – in their    stomach. An average of 36.8 pieces per bird were found. The average total    weight of plastic was 0.385 grams per bird. One bird was found with 454    pieces of plastic in its stomach. “The average adult    northern fulmar weighs five pounds, or 2.25 kilograms,” says Avery-Gomm.    “While 0.385 grams in a bird may seem inconsequential to us, it’s the    equivalent of about five per cent of their body mass. It would be like a    human carrying 50 grams of plastic in our stomach – about the weight of 10    quarters.” “Despite the close    proximity of the ‘Great Pacific Garbage Patch,’ an area of concentrated    plastic pollution in the middle of the North Pacific gyre, plastic pollution    has not been considered an issue of concern off our coast,” says Avery-Gomm,    “But we’ve found similar amounts and incident rates of plastic in beached    northern fulmars here as those in the North Sea. This indicates it is an    issue which warrants further study.” The researchers propose    annual monitoring of trends in plastic pollution and the effectiveness of    marine waste reduction strategies. “Beached bird surveys are    providing important clues about causes and patterns of sea bird mortality from    oil spill impacts, fisheries by-catch and now plastic ingestion,” says    co-author Karen Barry with Bird Studies Canada, a not-for profit organization    that helped facilitate the study. NB: Photographs    of the Northern fulmar and some of the stomach contents are available at http://www.publicaffairs.ubc.ca/?p=53051.    The study is available at http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0025326X12001828. Related    topics: environment,    Faculty of    Science, FoS, North Sea, Pacific    Northwest, plastic    pollution, research    excellence, sea    birds, Student    Learning, sustainability,    zoology 
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