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Seals' meals, plastic pieces and all.


Bite-size pieces of plastic chipped from wave-battered consumer products work their way up marine food chains, suggest researchers examining fur seals in Australia.

The oceans are awash in plastic flotsam A name for the goods that float upon the sea when cast overboard for the safety of the ship or when a ship is sunk. Distinguished from jetsam (goods deliberately thrown over to lighten ship) and ligan (goods cast into the sea attached to a buoy). , and scientists have long studied this debris and its effects on wildlife. Small plastic pellets are a hazard for hungry seabirds, which mistake them for fish eggs or other food. These pellets--the raw. material for plastic products--accumulate oily contaminants such as PCBs on their surfaces (SN: 2/3/01, p. 79). Larger refuse, such as fishnets and soft drink containers, has been considered hazardous but generally not because animals confuse it with food.

Between 1990 and 1997, Harry Burton Harry Burton (1879–1940) was an English Egyptologist and archaeological photographer. Born in Lincolnshire, England, he is best known for his photographs of excavations in Egypt's Valley of the Kings at the beginning of the 20th century.  of the Australian Antarctic Division The Australian Antarctic Division (AAD) is a division of the Department of the Environment and Water Resources. This is the Australian Government agency which manages Australia's Antarctic and sub-Antarctic stations and territories as part of the Australian Antarctic Program -  in Kingston, Tasmania Kingston is a suburb and region on the outskirts of Hobart, Tasmania, Australia. Nestled 15km south of the city between and around several hills, Kingston is the council seat of its wider municipality, the Kingborough Council, and today serves as the gateway between Hobart and the , and Cecilia Eriksson of Hobart, Tasmania, collected scat from two species of Antarctic fur seals living along beaches on Macquarie Island, Australia. In 145 droppings that the researchers examined, they found a total of 164 plastic particles. Almost all particles were irregularly shaped--not spherical or cylindrical, as industrial pellets are--and showed evidence of abrasion, suggesting to the researchers that the plastic bits derived from larger pieces.

Seals probably didn't consume the particles directly. More likely, Burton and Eriksson say in the September Ambio, the seals ate fish that had ingested in·gest  
tr.v. in·gest·ed, in·gest·ing, in·gests
1. To take into the body by the mouth for digestion or absorption. See Synonyms at eat.

2.
 bits of consumer products broken to pieces by rocks and waves.--B.H.
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Title Annotation:Environment
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:8AUST
Date:Nov 8, 2003
Words:220
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