INVESTIGATION OF MICROPLASTIC ACCUMULATION IN THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT IN BIRDS OF PREY

Plastic pollution is unavoidable in the natural environment. Consequences of plastic ingestion include exposure to environmental pollutants and toxin accumulation, causing endocrine disruption, inflammatory and physiological stress in organisms. Microplastics have been shown to transfer across food...

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Other Authors: Carlin, Julia (Author), Walters, Linda (Committee Chair), Donnelly, Melinda (Committee Member), University of Central Florida (Degree Grantor)
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: University of Central Florida
Subjects:
Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFH2000501
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spelling ftucentralflordl:oai:ucf.digital.flvc.org:ucf_45621 2023-11-12T04:28:22+01:00 INVESTIGATION OF MICROPLASTIC ACCUMULATION IN THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT IN BIRDS OF PREY Carlin, Julia (Author) Walters, Linda (Committee Chair) Donnelly, Melinda (Committee Member) University of Central Florida (Degree Grantor) http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFH2000501 English eng University of Central Florida CFH2000501 ucf:45621 http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFH2000501 public Microplastics birds of prey plastic pollution marine pollution red-shouldered hawk plastic Text ftucentralflordl 2023-10-24T16:31:31Z Plastic pollution is unavoidable in the natural environment. Consequences of plastic ingestion include exposure to environmental pollutants and toxin accumulation, causing endocrine disruption, inflammatory and physiological stress in organisms. Microplastics have been shown to transfer across food webs, however, limited studies have examined microplastic accumulation across terrestrial food webs. Furthermore, few studies have examined plastic pollution in apex predatory animals. A study was conducted to quantify the abundance of plastic pollution in the gastrointestinal tract in birds of prey. Two species were investigated, one which forages in terrestrial habitats and one which forages in aquatic environments including Buteo lineatus (red-shouldered hawk) and Pandion haliaetus (osprey), respectively. The gastrointestinal tract was necropsied, chemically digested, and examined for microplastic prevalence. Overall, microplastics are significantly more abundant per gram of gastrointestinal (GI) tract tissue in species that forage on small rodents and terrestrial reptiles (B. lineatus) as compared to species that forage on fish and aquatic invertebrates (P. haliaetus). Buteo lineatus averaged 0.81 (+/- 0.15) fibers and 0.14 (+/- 0.04) fragments per gram of GI tract tissue while P. halieatus averaged 0.31 (+/- 0.09) fibers and 0.04 (+/- 0.02) fragments per gram of GI tract tissue. There was a significant interaction between type and color in both B. lineatus and P. haliaetus GI tract tissues. Micro-Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy ([micro]-FTIR) was run on haphazardly selected samples and found that rayon was the most common polymer identified in both species. The significant difference found between species could be indicative that terrestrial raptors may experience greater bioaccumulation than aquatic species foraging at comparable trophic levels. However, the significant interaction between type and color in both species indicates a potential common source of pollution that affects both environments. ... Text osprey Pandion haliaetus UCF Digital Collections (University of Central Florida)
institution Open Polar
collection UCF Digital Collections (University of Central Florida)
op_collection_id ftucentralflordl
language English
topic Microplastics
birds of prey
plastic pollution
marine pollution
red-shouldered hawk
plastic
spellingShingle Microplastics
birds of prey
plastic pollution
marine pollution
red-shouldered hawk
plastic
INVESTIGATION OF MICROPLASTIC ACCUMULATION IN THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT IN BIRDS OF PREY
topic_facet Microplastics
birds of prey
plastic pollution
marine pollution
red-shouldered hawk
plastic
description Plastic pollution is unavoidable in the natural environment. Consequences of plastic ingestion include exposure to environmental pollutants and toxin accumulation, causing endocrine disruption, inflammatory and physiological stress in organisms. Microplastics have been shown to transfer across food webs, however, limited studies have examined microplastic accumulation across terrestrial food webs. Furthermore, few studies have examined plastic pollution in apex predatory animals. A study was conducted to quantify the abundance of plastic pollution in the gastrointestinal tract in birds of prey. Two species were investigated, one which forages in terrestrial habitats and one which forages in aquatic environments including Buteo lineatus (red-shouldered hawk) and Pandion haliaetus (osprey), respectively. The gastrointestinal tract was necropsied, chemically digested, and examined for microplastic prevalence. Overall, microplastics are significantly more abundant per gram of gastrointestinal (GI) tract tissue in species that forage on small rodents and terrestrial reptiles (B. lineatus) as compared to species that forage on fish and aquatic invertebrates (P. haliaetus). Buteo lineatus averaged 0.81 (+/- 0.15) fibers and 0.14 (+/- 0.04) fragments per gram of GI tract tissue while P. halieatus averaged 0.31 (+/- 0.09) fibers and 0.04 (+/- 0.02) fragments per gram of GI tract tissue. There was a significant interaction between type and color in both B. lineatus and P. haliaetus GI tract tissues. Micro-Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy ([micro]-FTIR) was run on haphazardly selected samples and found that rayon was the most common polymer identified in both species. The significant difference found between species could be indicative that terrestrial raptors may experience greater bioaccumulation than aquatic species foraging at comparable trophic levels. However, the significant interaction between type and color in both species indicates a potential common source of pollution that affects both environments. ...
author2 Carlin, Julia (Author)
Walters, Linda (Committee Chair)
Donnelly, Melinda (Committee Member)
University of Central Florida (Degree Grantor)
format Text
title INVESTIGATION OF MICROPLASTIC ACCUMULATION IN THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT IN BIRDS OF PREY
title_short INVESTIGATION OF MICROPLASTIC ACCUMULATION IN THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT IN BIRDS OF PREY
title_full INVESTIGATION OF MICROPLASTIC ACCUMULATION IN THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT IN BIRDS OF PREY
title_fullStr INVESTIGATION OF MICROPLASTIC ACCUMULATION IN THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT IN BIRDS OF PREY
title_full_unstemmed INVESTIGATION OF MICROPLASTIC ACCUMULATION IN THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT IN BIRDS OF PREY
title_sort investigation of microplastic accumulation in the gastrointestinal tract in birds of prey
publisher University of Central Florida
url http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFH2000501
genre osprey
Pandion haliaetus
genre_facet osprey
Pandion haliaetus
op_relation CFH2000501
ucf:45621
http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFH2000501
op_rights public
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