Recommended best practices for plastic and litter ingestion studies in marine birds: Collection, processing, and reporting.
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Date
2019Author
Provencher, Jennifer F.
Borrelle, Stephanie B.
Bond, Alexander L.
Lavers, Jennifer L.
van Franeker, Jan A.
Kühn, Susanne
Hammer, Sjúrður
Avery-Gomm, Stephanie
Mallory, Mark L.
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Marine plastic pollution is an environmental contaminant of significant concern. There is a lack of
consistency in sample collection and processing that continues to impede meta-analyses and largescale
comparisons across time and space. This is true for most taxa, including seabirds, which are
the most studied megafauna group with regards to plastic ingestion research. Consequently, it is difficult
to evaluate the impacts and extent of plastic contamination in seabirds fully and accurately,
and to make inferences about species for which we have little or no data. We provide a synthesized
set of recommendations specific for seabirds and plastic ingestion studies that include best practices
in relation to sample collection, processing, and reporting, as well as highlighting some
“cross-cutting” methods. We include guidance for how carcasses, regurgitations, and pellets should
be handled and treated to prevent cross-contamination, and a discussion of what size class of microplast.....
Journal
FACETSVolume
4Page Range
pp.111-130Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.114.a
Essential Ocean Variables (EOV)
Marine debrisDOI Original
10.1139/facets-2018-0043Citation
Provencher, J.F., Borrelle, S.B., Bond, A.L., Lavers, J.L., van Franeker, J.A., Kühn, S., Hammer, S., Avery-Gomm, S., and Mallory, M.L. (2019) Recommended best practices for plastic and litter ingestion studies in marine birds: Collection, processing, and reporting. FACETS 4: pp.111–130. DOI:10.1139/facets-2018-0043Collections
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