Seabirds as a Vector and Concentrators of Microplastics in Arctic ecosystems ...

Plastic debris is now recognized as a common contaminant affecting marine ecosystems. Since 2003 the Arctic seabird team has worked to assess which northern marine bird species are vulnerable to ingesting marine plastic pollution. To date a number of marine bird species have been shown to ingest pla...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Provencher, Jennifer, Mallory, Mark, Rochman, Chelsea, Vermaire, Jesse
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Canadian Cryospheric Information Network 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.21963/13057
https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch?doi_id=13057
id ftdatacite:10.21963/13057
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.21963/13057 2024-09-15T18:26:56+00:00 Seabirds as a Vector and Concentrators of Microplastics in Arctic ecosystems ... Provencher, Jennifer Mallory, Mark Rochman, Chelsea Vermaire, Jesse 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.21963/13057 https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch?doi_id=13057 unknown Canadian Cryospheric Information Network Dataset dataset 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.21963/13057 2024-07-03T10:41:07Z Plastic debris is now recognized as a common contaminant affecting marine ecosystems. Since 2003 the Arctic seabird team has worked to assess which northern marine bird species are vulnerable to ingesting marine plastic pollution. To date a number of marine bird species have been shown to ingest plastics. Through these studies it have also been recently demonstrated that seabirds may shed ingested plastics in the form of microplastics in their guano. This suggests that seabirds may act as a vector for microplastic movement in the marine environment, and potentially to the terrestrial environment. To test if seabird excretion of microplastics is contributing to an accumulation of microplastics around seabird colonies, we will work with local hunters in Qikiqtarjuaq, Nunavut to collect biotic and environmental samples from around two local seabird colonies known to have birds with high plastic ingestion rates. Air, water, blue mussels and sediment samples will be collected below the cliff-side colonies, and at ... : The aim of this project is to determine the distribution of both plastics and microplastics in Arctic ecosystems, and how seabirds may act as vectors and accumulators of plastic pollution. Thus, this project aims to explore how microplastics in bird guano around seabird colonies may contribute to the fate and concentration of microplastics in Arctic ecosystems. Specifically, this project will answer three main questions; 1) what is the distribution of microplastics in air, water, and sediments and how do they relate to their proximity from large seabird colonies?; 2) how are microplastics distributed in a benthic indicator species (blue mussels) in relation to their proximity from large seabird colonies?; and 3) how has the type and quantity of plastics accumulated by two seabird species in the Qikiqtarjuaq area changed since it was last quantified in 2007/08? ... Dataset Nunavut Qikiqtarjuaq DataCite
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
description Plastic debris is now recognized as a common contaminant affecting marine ecosystems. Since 2003 the Arctic seabird team has worked to assess which northern marine bird species are vulnerable to ingesting marine plastic pollution. To date a number of marine bird species have been shown to ingest plastics. Through these studies it have also been recently demonstrated that seabirds may shed ingested plastics in the form of microplastics in their guano. This suggests that seabirds may act as a vector for microplastic movement in the marine environment, and potentially to the terrestrial environment. To test if seabird excretion of microplastics is contributing to an accumulation of microplastics around seabird colonies, we will work with local hunters in Qikiqtarjuaq, Nunavut to collect biotic and environmental samples from around two local seabird colonies known to have birds with high plastic ingestion rates. Air, water, blue mussels and sediment samples will be collected below the cliff-side colonies, and at ... : The aim of this project is to determine the distribution of both plastics and microplastics in Arctic ecosystems, and how seabirds may act as vectors and accumulators of plastic pollution. Thus, this project aims to explore how microplastics in bird guano around seabird colonies may contribute to the fate and concentration of microplastics in Arctic ecosystems. Specifically, this project will answer three main questions; 1) what is the distribution of microplastics in air, water, and sediments and how do they relate to their proximity from large seabird colonies?; 2) how are microplastics distributed in a benthic indicator species (blue mussels) in relation to their proximity from large seabird colonies?; and 3) how has the type and quantity of plastics accumulated by two seabird species in the Qikiqtarjuaq area changed since it was last quantified in 2007/08? ...
format Dataset
author Provencher, Jennifer
Mallory, Mark
Rochman, Chelsea
Vermaire, Jesse
spellingShingle Provencher, Jennifer
Mallory, Mark
Rochman, Chelsea
Vermaire, Jesse
Seabirds as a Vector and Concentrators of Microplastics in Arctic ecosystems ...
author_facet Provencher, Jennifer
Mallory, Mark
Rochman, Chelsea
Vermaire, Jesse
author_sort Provencher, Jennifer
title Seabirds as a Vector and Concentrators of Microplastics in Arctic ecosystems ...
title_short Seabirds as a Vector and Concentrators of Microplastics in Arctic ecosystems ...
title_full Seabirds as a Vector and Concentrators of Microplastics in Arctic ecosystems ...
title_fullStr Seabirds as a Vector and Concentrators of Microplastics in Arctic ecosystems ...
title_full_unstemmed Seabirds as a Vector and Concentrators of Microplastics in Arctic ecosystems ...
title_sort seabirds as a vector and concentrators of microplastics in arctic ecosystems ...
publisher Canadian Cryospheric Information Network
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.21963/13057
https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch?doi_id=13057
genre Nunavut
Qikiqtarjuaq
genre_facet Nunavut
Qikiqtarjuaq
op_doi https://doi.org/10.21963/13057
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