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Science

Most seabirds have plastic in their guts

As many as nine out of 10 of the world's seabirds likely have pieces of plastic in their guts, a new study estimates.

Glow sticks, balloons, lighters, model cars among objects found inside birds

An Albatross carcass found on Midway Island in the central Pacific Ocean in the 1990s suggests the animal swallowed large amounts of plastic debris before its death. As many as nine out of 10 of the world's seabirds likely have pieces of plastic in their guts, a new study suggests. (Britta Denise Hardesty/CSIRO via AP)

As many as nine out of 10 of the world's seabirds likely have pieces of plastic in their guts, a new study estimates.

Previously, scientists figured about 29 per cent of seabirds had swallowed plastic, based on older studies. An Australian team of scientists who have studied birds and marine debris for decades used computer models to update those figures, calculating that far more seabirds are affected, according to a new study published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"It's pretty astronomical," said study co-author Denise Hardesty, senior research scientist at the Australian federal science agency. She said the problem with plastics in the ocean is increasing as the world makes more of the stuff. "In the next 11 years we will make as much plastic as has been made since industrial plastic production began in the 1950s."

She combined computer simulations of locations of the garbage and the birds, as well as their eating habits, to see where the worst problems are.

A red-footed booby sits among plastic debris on Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean. (Britta Denise Hardesty/Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation via AP)

Hardesty's work found that the biggest problem strangely isn't where there's the most garbage, such as the infamous garbage patch in the central north Pacific Ocean. Instead it's where there's the greatest number of different species, especially in the southern hemisphere near Australia and New Zealand.

Areas around North America and Europe are better off, she said. By reducing plastic pellets, Europe is even seeing fewer of those plastic bits in one key bird, the northern fulmar, she said. Some species of albatross and shearwaters seem to be the most prone to eating plastic pieces.

Plastic mistaken for fish eggs

Birds mistake plastic bits for fish eggs, so "they think they're getting a proper meal but they're really getting a plastic meal," Hardesty said.

Usually it's incredibly tiny pieces of plastic, but Hardesty has seen far bigger things, such as an entire glow stick and three balloons in a single short-tailed shearwater bird.

"I have seen everything from cigarette lighters ... to bottle caps to model cars. I've found toys," Hardesty said.

And it's only likely to get worse. By 2050, 99 per cent of seabirds will have plastic in them, Hardesty's computer model forecast. That prediction "seems astonishingly high, but probably not unrealistic," said American University environmental scientist Kiho Kim, who wasn't part of the study but praised it.

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) scientist Britta Denise Hardesty shows plastic dissected from a dead flesh-footed shearwater. An Australian team of scientists used computer models to update estimates for the proportion of birds with plastic in their guts. (Britta Denise Hardesty/CSIRO via AP)