Plastics in the Pacific: Assessing risk from ocean debris for marine birds in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem

被引:16
|
作者
Good, Thomas P. [1 ]
Samhouri, Jameal F. [1 ]
Feist, Blake E. [1 ]
Wilcox, Chris [2 ]
Jahncke, Jaime [3 ]
机构
[1] NOAA, Ecosyst Sci Program, Conservat Biol Div, Northwest Fisheries Sci Ctr,Natl Marine Fisheries, 2725 Montlake Blvd East, Seattle, WA 98112 USA
[2] Commonwealth Sci & Ind Res Org, Oceans & Atmosphere Business Unit, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia
[3] Point Blue Conservat Sci, 3820 Cypress Dr,11, Petaluma, CA 94954 USA
基金
美国海洋和大气管理局;
关键词
Marine birds; Plastic; Risk assessment; Exposure; Sensitivity; California Current Large Marine Ecosystem; AUKLETS PTYCHORAMPHUS-ALEUTICUS; NORTHERN FULMARS; INGESTION; POLLUTION; SEABIRDS; PARTICLES; CONSERVATION; IMPACTS; VULNERABILITY; ACCUMULATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.biocon.2020.108743
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Understanding the impact of plastic debris on marine birds is important for conservation of some species, and assessing risk from this anthropogenic threat requires high-quality distribution data for both marine birds and plastic debris. We applied a risk assessment framework to explore the relative risk for 19 marine bird species posed by plastic debris in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem. We estimated exposure for each species by combining scores from (1) spatial overlap of predicted marine bird densities from habitat-association models and predicted density of marine plastics from terrestrial input and ocean circulation models, (2) species' foraging behavior, and (3) species' residence time in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem. We estimated sensitivity for each species by combining scores for (1) mortality/sub-lethal effects of ingested plastic debris, (2) off-loading of plastics via regurgitation, (3) fecundity, and (4) age of breeding maturity. Overall risk from marine debris was greatest for more pelagic species and lowest for nearshore coastal species and generally agreed with published plastic ingestion studies. Notably, marine plastic debris densities are greatest at the western edge and offshore of the study domain, which likely explains the greater risk we observed in more pelagic species. This study is the first to look specifically at plastic debris risk to marine birds in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem, and our results suggest that any attempts to mitigate the impacts of plastic debris on marine birds will likely require assessment and actions beyond the California Current into the broader Pacific basin.
引用
收藏
页数:34
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Dissimilar Sensitivities of Ocean Acidification Metrics to Anthropogenic Carbon Accumulation in the Central North Pacific Ocean and California Current Large Marine Ecosystem
    Arroyo, Mar C.
    Fassbender, Andrea J.
    Carter, Brendan R.
    Edwards, Christopher A.
    Fiechter, Jerome
    Norgaard, Addie
    Feely, Richard A.
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2022, 49 (15)
  • [2] Habitat associations of floating debris and marine birds in the North East Pacific Ocean at coarse and meso spatial scales
    Titmus, Andrew J.
    Hyrenbach, K. David
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2011, 62 (11) : 2496 - 2506
  • [3] Prevalence of marine debris in marine birds from the North Atlantic
    Provencher, Jennifer F.
    Bond, Alexander L.
    Hedd, April
    Montevecchi, William A.
    Bin Muzaffar, Sabir
    Courchesne, Sarah J.
    Gilchrist, H. Grant
    Jamieson, Sarah E.
    Merkel, Flemming R.
    Falk, Knud
    Durinck, Jan
    Mallory, Mark L.
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2014, 84 (1-2) : 411 - 417
  • [4] Exploring local adaptation and the ocean acidification seascape studies - in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem
    Hofmann, G. E.
    Evans, T. G.
    Kelly, M. W.
    Padilla-Gamino, J. L.
    Blanchette, C. A.
    Washburn, L.
    Chan, F.
    McManus, M. A.
    Menge, B. A.
    Gaylord, B.
    Hill, T. M.
    Sanford, E.
    LaVigne, M.
    Rose, J. M.
    Kapsenberg, L.
    Dutton, J. M.
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2014, 11 (04) : 1053 - 1064
  • [5] Vulnerability to climate change of managed stocks in the California Current large marine ecosystem
    McClure, Michelle M. M.
    Haltuch, Melissa A. A.
    Willis-Norton, Ellen
    Huff, David D. D.
    Hazen, Elliott L. L.
    Crozier, Lisa G. G.
    Jacox, Michael G. G.
    Nelson, Mark W. W.
    Andrews, Kelly S. S.
    Barnett, Lewis A. K.
    Berger, Aaron M. M.
    Beyer, Sabrina
    Bizzarro, Joe
    Boughton, David
    Cope, Jason M. M.
    Carr, Mark
    Dewar, Heidi
    Dick, Edward
    Dorval, Emmanis
    Dunham, Jason
    Gertseva, Vladlena
    Greene, Correigh M. M.
    Gustafson, Richard G. G.
    Hamel, Owen S. S.
    Harvey, Chris J. J.
    Henderson, Mark J. J.
    Jordan, Chris E. E.
    Kaplan, Isaac C. C.
    Lindley, Steven T. T.
    Mantua, Nathan J. J.
    Matson, Sean E. E.
    Monk, Melissa H. H.
    Moyle, Peter
    Nicol, Colin
    Pohl, John
    Rykaczewski, Ryan R. R.
    Samhouri, Jameal F. F.
    Sogard, Susan
    Tolimieri, Nick
    Wallace, John
    Wetzel, Chantel
    Bograd, Steven J. J.
    FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2023, 10
  • [6] A preliminary spatial assessment of risk: Marine birds and chronic oil pollution on Canada's Pacific coast
    Fox, C. H.
    O'Hara, P. D.
    Bertazzon, S.
    Morgan, K.
    Underwood, F. E.
    Paquet, P. C.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2016, 573 : 799 - 809
  • [7] Crossing the Pacific: Genomics Reveals the Presence of Japanese Sardine (Sardinops melanosticta) in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem
    Longo, Gary C.
    Minich, Jeremiah J.
    Allsing, Nicholas
    James, Kelsey
    Adams-Herrmann, Ella S.
    Larson, Wes
    Hartwick, Nolan
    Duong, Tiffany
    Muhling, Barbara
    Michael, Todd P.
    Craig, Matthew T.
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2024, 33 (22)
  • [8] Organic micropollutants in marine plastics debris from the open ocean and remote and urban beaches
    Hirai, Hisashi
    Takada, Hideshige
    Ogata, Yuko
    Yamashita, Rei
    Mizukawa, Kaoruko
    Saha, Mahua
    Kwan, Charita
    Moore, Charles
    Gray, Holly
    Laursen, Duane
    Zettler, Erik R.
    Farrington, John W.
    Reddy, Christopher M.
    Peacock, Emily E.
    Ward, Marc W.
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2011, 62 (08) : 1683 - 1692
  • [9] Research Review of Collaborative Ecosystem-Based Management in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem
    Coleman, Kary
    COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 2008, 36 (05) : 484 - 494
  • [10] Plastic debris in marine birds from an island located in the South China Sea
    Zhu, Chunyou
    Li, Daning
    Sun, Yuxin
    Zheng, Xiaobo
    Peng, Xianzhi
    Zheng, Ke
    Hu, Beibei
    Luo, Xiaojun
    Mai, Bixian
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2019, 149