PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Plastic in 99 percent of seabirds by 2050

Plastic in 99 percent of seabirds by 2050
2015-08-31
(Press-News.org) Researchers from CSIRO and Imperial College London have assessed how widespread the threat of plastic is for the world's seabirds, including albatrosses, shearwaters and penguins, and found the majority of seabird species have plastic in their gut.

The study, led by Dr Chris Wilcox with co-authors Dr Denise Hardesty and Dr Erik van Sebille and published today in the journal PNAS, found that nearly 60 per cent of all seabird species have plastic in their gut.

Based on analysis of published studies since the early 1960s, the researchers found that plastic is increasingly common in seabird's stomachs.

In 1960, plastic was found in the stomach of less than 5 per cent of individual seabirds, rising to 80 per cent by 2010.

The researchers predict that plastic ingestion will affect 99 per cent of the world's seabird species by 2050, based on current trends.

The scientists estimate that 90 per cent of all seabirds alive today have eaten plastic of some kind.

This includes bags, bottle caps, and plastic fibres from synthetic clothes, which have washed out into the ocean from urban rivers, sewers and waste deposits.

Birds mistake the brightly coloured items for food, or swallow them by accident, and this causes gut impaction, weight loss and sometimes even death.

"For the first time, we have a global prediction of how wide-reaching plastic impacts may be on marine species - and the results are striking," senior research scientist at CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Dr Wilcox said.

"We predict, using historical observations, that 90 per cent of individual seabirds have eaten plastic. This is a huge amount and really points to the ubiquity of plastic pollution."

Dr Denise Hardesty from CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere said seabirds were excellent indicators of ecosystem health.

"Finding such widespread estimates of plastic in seabirds is borne out by some of the fieldwork we've carried out where I've found nearly 200 pieces of plastic in a single seabird," Dr Hardesty said.

The researchers found plastics will have the greatest impact on wildlife where they gather in the Southern Ocean, in a band around the southern edges of Australia, South Africa and South America.

Dr van Sebille, from the Grantham Institute at Imperial College London, said the plastics had the most devastating impact in the areas where there was the greatest diversity of species.

"We are very concerned about species such as penguins and giant albatrosses, which live in these areas," Erik van Sebille said.

"While the infamous garbage patches in the middle of the oceans have strikingly high densities of plastic, very few animals live here."

Dr Hardesty said there was still the opportunity to change the impact plastic had on seabirds.

"Improving waste management can reduce the threat plastic is posing to marine wildlife," she said.

"Even simple measures can make a difference. Efforts to reduce plastics losses into the environment in Europe resulted in measureable changes in plastic in seabird stomachs with less than a decade, which suggests that improvements in basic waste management can reduce plastic in the environment in a really short time."

Chief Scientist at the US-based Ocean Conservancy Dr George H. Leonard said the study was highly important and demonstrated how pervasive plastics were in oceans.

"Hundreds of thousands of volunteers around the world come face-to-face with this problem during annual Coastal Cleanup events," Dr Leonard said.

"Scientists, the private sector and global citizens working together against the growing onslaught of plastic pollution can reduce plastic inputs to help protect marine biodiversity."

INFORMATION:

The work was carried out as part of a national marine debris project supported by CSIRO and Shell's Social investment program as well as the marine debris working group at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, University of California, Santa Barbara, with support from Ocean Conservancy.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Plastic in 99 percent of seabirds by 2050

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Single mothers much more likely to live in poverty than single fathers, study finds

2015-08-31
URBANA, Ill. - Single mothers earn significantly less than single fathers, and they're penalized for each additional child they have even though the income of single fathers remains the same or increases with each added child in their family. Men also make more for every additional year they invest in education, further widening the gender gap, reports a University of Illinois study. "Single mothers earn about two-thirds of what single fathers earn. Even when we control for such variables as occupation, numbers of hours worked, education, and social capital, the income ...

Study reveals human body has gone through four stages of evolution

2015-08-31
BINGHAMTON, NY - Research into 430,000-year-old fossils collected in northern Spain found that the evolution of the human body's size and shape has gone through four main stages, according to a paper published this week. A large international research team including Binghamton University anthropologist Rolf Quam studied the body size and shape in the human fossil collection from the site of the Sima de los Huesos in the Sierra de Atapuerca in northern Spain. Dated to around 430,000 years ago, this site preserves the largest collection of human fossils found to date anywhere ...

Older people getting smarter, but not fitter

2015-08-31
Older populations are scoring better on cognitive tests than people of the same age did in the past --a trend that could be linked to higher education rates and increased use of technology in our daily lives, say IIASA population researchers. People over age 50 are scoring increasingly better on tests of cognitive function, according to a new study published in the journal PLOS ONE. At the same time, however, the study showed that average physical health of the older population has declined. The study relied on representative survey data from Germany which measured cognitive ...

Gene leads to nearsightedness when kids read

Gene leads to nearsightedness when kids read
2015-08-31
NEW YORK, NY (August 31, 2015) -- Vision researchers at Columbia University Medical Center have discovered a gene that causes myopia, but only in people who spend a lot of time in childhood reading or doing other "nearwork." Using a database of approximately 14,000 people, the researchers found that those with a certain variant of the gene - called APLP2 - were five times more likely to develop myopia in their teens if they had read an hour or more each day in their childhood. Those who carried the APLP2 risk variant but spent less time reading had no additional risk ...

Dialect influences Appalachian students' experiences in college

2015-08-31
An in-depth dialect study from NC State University researchers shows that some students from rural Appalachia feel that their dialects put them at a disadvantage in a college classroom, even in the South. The Journal of Higher Education study raises important questions about language as a type of diversity that isn't always celebrated on campus, says lead author Stephany Dunstan, a linguist and associate director of assessment at NC State. In their interviews, some rural Appalachian students recalled times when they spoke up in class only to be met with snickers for ...

We've all got a blind spot, but it can be shrunk

2015-08-31
You've probably never noticed, but the human eye includes an unavoidable blind spot. That's because the optic nerve that sends visual signals to the brain must pass through the retina, which creates a hole in that light-sensitive layer of tissue. When images project to that precise location, we miss them. Now researchers reporting in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on August 31 have some good news: this blind spot can be effectively "shrunk" with training, despite the fact that the hole in our visual field cannot be. The findings raise the possibility that similar ...

Heart rate, heart rate variability in older adults linked to poorer function

2015-08-31
A higher resting heart rate and lower heart rate variability in older adults at high risk of heart disease are associated with poorer ability to function in daily life as well as future decline, according to a new research in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). "It has been hypothesized that heart rate and heart rate variability are markers of frailty, an increased vulnerability to stressors and functional decline," writes Dr. Behnam Sabayan, Department of Gerontology and Geriatrics, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands, with coauthors. "However, ...

Lyme disease testing: Canadians may receive false-positives from some US labs

2015-08-31
Lyme disease is becoming increasingly common in Canada, and Canadians with Lyme disease symptoms may seek diagnoses from laboratories in the United States, although many of the results will be false-positives, according to a commentary in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). "Patients with chronic subjective symptoms without a diagnosis can be vulnerable and desperate for an answer as to the cause of their illness," writes Dr. Dan Gregson, divisions of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, departments of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, and Medicine, ...

Temple Lung Center study shows benefits for COPD patients using digital health application

2015-08-31
(Philadelphia, PA) - Early intervention facilitated by a digital health application for reporting symptoms of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) provides key benefits for patients, according to the results of a Temple-led, two-year clinical study. COPD is a serious chronic respiratory disease that is often characterized by flare-ups, called acute exacerbations, in which the patient may experience increased coughing, mucus, shortness of breath, wheezing, and a feeling of tightness in their chest. If exacerbation symptoms are not detected and treated in a timely ...

Raising pay can reduce smoking rates

2015-08-31
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) -- In addition to restricting when and where tobacco is used at work, UC Davis Health System research shows that employers can do something else to reduce smoking: raise wages. Published in the August issue of the Annals of Epidemiology, the study found that a 10 percent increase in wages leads to about a 5 percent drop in smoking rates among workers who are male or who have high school educations or less and improves their overall chances of quitting smoking from 17 to 20 percent. "Our findings are especially important as inflation-adjusted wages ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Unlocking the secrets of the first quasars: how they defy the laws of physics to grow

Study reveals importance of student-teacher relationships in early childhood education

Do abortion policy changes affect young women’s mental health?

Can sown wildflowers compensate for cities’ lack of natural meadows to support pollinating insects?

Is therapeutic hypothermia an effective treatment for hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, a type of neurological dysfunction in newborns?

Scientists discover the molecular composition of potentially deadly venomous fish

What are the belowground responses to long-term soil warming among different types of trees?

Do area-wide social and environmental factors affect individuals’ risk of cognitive impairment?

UCLA professor Helen Lavretsky reshapes brain health through integrative medicine research

Astronauts found to process some tasks slower in space, but no signs of permanent cognitive decline

Larger pay increases and better benefits could support teacher retention

Researchers characterize mechanism for regulating orderly zygotic genome activation in early embryos

AI analysis of urine can predict flare up of lung disease a week in advance

New DESI results weigh in on gravity

New DESI data shed light on gravity’s pull in the universe

Boosting WA startups: Report calls for investment in talent, diversity and innovation

New AEM study highlights feasibility of cranial accelerometry device for prehospital detection of large-vessel occlusion stroke

High cardiorespiratory fitness linked to lower risk of dementia

Oral microbiome varies with life stress and mental health symptoms in pregnant women

NFL’s Arizona Cardinals provide 12 schools with CPR resources to improve cardiac emergency outcomes

Northerners, Scots and Irish excel at detecting fake accents to guard against outsiders, Cambridge study suggests

Synchronized movement between robots and humans builds trust, study finds

Global experts make sense of the science shaping public policies worldwide in new International Science Council and Frontiers Policy Labs series

The Wistar Institute and Cameroon researchers reveals HIV latency reversing properties in African plant

$4.5 million Dept. of Education grant to expand mental health services through Binghamton University Community Schools

Thermochemical tech shows promising path for building heat

Four Tufts University faculty are named top researchers in the world

Columbia Aging Center epidemiologist co-authors new report from National Academies on using race and ethnicity in biomedical research

Astronomers discover first pairs of white dwarf and main sequence stars in clusters, shining new light on stellar evolution

C-Path’s TRxA announces $1 million award for drug development project in type 1 diabetes

[Press-News.org] Plastic in 99 percent of seabirds by 2050