LONDON: Consuming just one piece of plastic waste could significantly increase the chance of death for a sea turtle, according to a study on the link between sea turtle mortality and plastic debris ingestion.
Researchers found there was a one in five chance of death for a turtle who consumed just one plastic item, and the probability rose to 50 percent for 14 pieces.
Sea turtles are among the first taxa recorded to ingest plastic debris, a phenomenon that occurs in every region of the world and in all seven marine turtle species. Those floating plastic wastes are often mistaken by marine life for tasty jellyfish.
Globally, it is estimated that approximately 52 percent of all sea turtles have ingested plastic debris. It happens at all stages of a sea turtle’s lifecycle, and particularly most frequent in juvenile stages.
Around 23 percent of juveniles and 54 percent of post-hatchling turtles have ingested plastic compared to 16 percent of adults. Scientists say that is because young turtles are less selective in what they eat, and they drift and float with the ocean currents as does much of the buoyant, small lightweight plastic.
The accumulation and persistence of plastic debris in the marine environment are of increasing concern. According to the study, an estimated 4.8 to 12.7 million metric tonnes of plastic debris entered the world’s oceans from land-based sources in 2010 alone, with this input likely to increase exponentially into the future.
This poses a considerable threat to marine life, primarily through entanglement and ingestion. The study has been published in the journal Scientific Reports.