Field measurements reveal exposure risk to microplastic ingestion by filter-feeding megafauna

Author:

Kahane-Rapport S. R.ORCID,Czapanskiy M. F.ORCID,Fahlbusch J. A.,Friedlaender A. S.,Calambokidis J.,Hazen E. L.ORCID,Goldbogen J. A.,Savoca M. S.

Abstract

AbstractMicroparticles, such as microplastics and microfibers, are ubiquitous in marine food webs. Filter-feeding megafauna may be at extreme risk of exposure to microplastics, but neither the amount nor pathway of microplastic ingestion are well understood. Here, we combine depth-integrated microplastic data from the California Current Ecosystem with high-resolution foraging measurements from 191 tag deployments on blue, fin, and humpback whales to quantify plastic ingestion rates and routes of exposure. We find that baleen whales predominantly feed at depths of 50–250 m, coinciding with the highest measured microplastic concentrations in the pelagic ecosystem. Nearly all (99%) microplastic ingestion is predicted to occur via trophic transfer. We predict that fish-feeding whales are less exposed to microplastic ingestion than krill-feeding whales. Per day, a krill-obligate blue whale may ingest 10 million pieces of microplastic, while a fish-feeding humpback whale likely ingests 200,000 pieces of microplastic. For species struggling to recover from historical whaling alongside other anthropogenic pressures, our findings suggest that the cumulative impacts of multiple stressors require further attention.

Funder

American Cetacean Society, Monterey Bay Chapter, and the Dr. Earl H. Myers and Ethel M. Myers Oceanographic and Marine Biology Trust

National Science Foundation

United States Department of Defense | United States Navy | Office of Naval Research

United States Department of Defense | National Defense University

MAC3 Impact Philanthropies

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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