Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5749269 Environmental Pollution 2017 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•High prevalence of plastics was found in faeces of three waterfowl species in Central Spain.•Remnants of threads are the most frequent plastics in faeces of all the studied species.•Ingestion of plastics by birds in inland agricultural landscapes may be a problem previously underrated.

Plastic intake by marine vertebrates has been widely reported, but information about its presence in continental waterfowl is scarce. Here we analyzed faeces of waterbirds species (European coot, Fulica atra, mallard, Anas platyrhynchos and shelduck, Tadorna tadorna) for plastic debris in five wetlands in Central Spain. We collected 89 faeces of shelduck distributed in four lakes, 43.8% of them presented plastic remnants. Sixty percent of 10 faeces of European coot and 45% of 40 faeces of mallard contained plastic debris. Plastic debris found was of two types, threads and fragments, and were identified as remnants of plastic objects used in agricultural fields surrounding the lakes. Differences in prevalence of plastic in faeces, number of plastic pieces per excrement and size of the plastic pieces were not statistically significant between waterfowl species. Thus, our results suggest that plastic may also be frequently ingested by waterfowl in continental waters, at least in our study area. Future studies should address this potential problem for waterbird conservation in other wetlands to evaluate the real impact of this pollutant on waterbirds living in inland water.

Graphical abstractA sample of the plastics found in several shelduck faeces.Download high-res image (304KB)Download full-size image

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Chemistry
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