Wilcox Chris, Van Sebille Erik, Hardesty Britta Denise
Oceans and Atmosphere Business Unit, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Hobart, TAS 7001, Australia; chris.wilcox@csiro.
Grantham Institute & Department of Physics, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom; Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Sep 22;112(38):11899-904. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1502108112. Epub 2015 Aug 31.
Plastic pollution in the ocean is a global concern; concentrations reach 580,000 pieces per km(2) and production is increasing exponentially. Although a large number of empirical studies provide emerging evidence of impacts to wildlife, there has been little systematic assessment of risk. We performed a spatial risk analysis using predicted debris distributions and ranges for 186 seabird species to model debris exposure. We adjusted the model using published data on plastic ingestion by seabirds. Eighty of 135 (59%) species with studies reported in the literature between 1962 and 2012 had ingested plastic, and, within those studies, on average 29% of individuals had plastic in their gut. Standardizing the data for time and species, we estimate the ingestion rate would reach 90% of individuals if these studies were conducted today. Using these results from the literature, we tuned our risk model and were able to capture 71% of the variation in plastic ingestion based on a model including exposure, time, study method, and body size. We used this tuned model to predict risk across seabird species at the global scale. The highest area of expected impact occurs at the Southern Ocean boundary in the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand, which contrasts with previous work identifying this area as having low anthropogenic pressures and concentrations of marine debris. We predict that plastics ingestion is increasing in seabirds, that it will reach 99% of all species by 2050, and that effective waste management can reduce this threat.
海洋中的塑料污染是一个全球关注的问题;其浓度达到每平方公里580,000块,且产量呈指数增长。尽管大量实证研究提供了塑料污染对野生动物产生影响的新证据,但对风险的系统评估却很少。我们利用186种海鸟的预测碎片分布和范围进行了空间风险分析,以模拟碎片暴露情况。我们根据已发表的海鸟塑料摄入量数据对模型进行了调整。在1962年至2012年期间发表研究报告的135种海鸟中,有80种(59%)摄入过塑料,并且在这些研究中,平均有29%的个体肠道中有塑料。将数据按时间和物种进行标准化处理后,我们估计如果现在进行这些研究,塑料摄入量将达到90%的个体。利用文献中的这些结果,我们调整了风险模型,基于一个包含暴露、时间、研究方法和体型的模型,能够捕捉到塑料摄入量71%的变化情况。我们使用这个调整后的模型预测全球范围内海鸟物种的风险。预计影响最大的区域出现在澳大利亚和新西兰之间塔斯曼海的南大洋边界,这与之前将该区域认定为人类活动压力低且海洋垃圾浓度低的研究结果形成了对比。我们预测海鸟摄入塑料的情况正在增加,到2050年将达到所有物种的99%,并且有效的废物管理可以降低这种威胁。