Publications by authors named "Gary W Shugart"

Short-tailed shearwater (Ardenna tenuirostris) stomach contents provide some of the earliest documentation of oceanic plastic pollution, one of the longer data series of seabird stomach samples, and the species' wide range in the North and South Pacific provides comparative data for the Pacific Ocean. A mortality event in the North Pacific in 2019 provided additional data for spatiotemporal comparisons. In the North Pacific the percent occurrence, mass, and number of pieces were similar since the first records in the 1970s.

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Many studies have quantified plastic loads in seabirds' stomachs but provide imprecise estimates of retention time. Quantifying retention time is fundamental for assessing biological impact and for the use of plastic as bioindicators of plastic pollution. Presumably, plastic is retained in the grinding section of the stomach (gizzard or ventriculus) until ground small enough and particles then pass into intestines and are defecated.

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Oceanic plastic debris found in the digestive tracts of seabirds includes industrial plastic pellets and post-consumer user plastics. We examined whether the amount and type of plastic ingested by Cassin's Auklets (Ptychoramphus aleuticus) is changing by surveying the stomach contents of 171 Cassin's Auklets stranded along the Washington and Oregon coasts in 2014. We found that 41.

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We found microplastic in 89.5% of 143 Northern Fulmars from 2008 to 2013 and 64% of 25 Sooty Shearwaters in 2011-2012 that were found dead or stranded on Oregon and Washington beaches. Average plastic loads were 19.

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