2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2015.02.022
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Debris ingestion by juvenile marine turtles: An underestimated problem

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Cited by 137 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…As such, the Ascension MPA is exposed to a significant pollution risk via ocean circulation. This is a particular threat to the islands important rookery for the endangered green turtle [ Petit and Prudent , ], as the juveniles can perish by ingesting less than 1 g of marine debris [ Santos et al ., ]. Finally, the BIOT MPA is the most vulnerable to coastal pollution via ocean circulation of all the MPAs in this study, as it has both the highest coastal connectivity, at 71%, and population density encountered, at 6,720 person/km 2 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, the Ascension MPA is exposed to a significant pollution risk via ocean circulation. This is a particular threat to the islands important rookery for the endangered green turtle [ Petit and Prudent , ], as the juveniles can perish by ingesting less than 1 g of marine debris [ Santos et al ., ]. Finally, the BIOT MPA is the most vulnerable to coastal pollution via ocean circulation of all the MPAs in this study, as it has both the highest coastal connectivity, at 71%, and population density encountered, at 6,720 person/km 2 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here we have estimated the probability that turtles ingest marine debris, but what happens as a result of that ingestion is of critical importance. Even as little as 0.5 g of ingested debris can cause mortality (Santos et al ., ), but turtles are also subject to a number of sublethal impacts such as dietary dilution, reduced fitness and absorption of toxic compounds (Ryan & Jackson, ; McCauley & Bjorndal, ; Talsness et al ., ). Unfortunately, there were not sufficient data to model the impacts from plastic ingestion in this analysis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, here we consider animals caught in passive ghost fishing gear as entangled, not bycaught. Secondly, there have also been reports of entanglement in litter from land-based sources (Chatto 1995, Bentivegna 1995, Santos et al 2015. In this review we do not include bycaught turtles -only those that have become entangled in passive anthropogenic debris such as ghost gear or land-based debris.…”
Section: Types Of Marine Debris Causing Entanglementmentioning
confidence: 99%