Study quantifies deadly plastic ingestion in marine species

A comprehensive study led by Ocean Conservancy's Dr. Erin Murphy has determined the lethal amounts of ocean plastic for seabirds, sea turtles, and marine mammals. Published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the research analyzed over 10,000 necropsies from 95 species worldwide. The findings highlight low thresholds for mortality and urge broad policy reforms to curb plastic pollution.

Dr. Erin Murphy, manager of ocean plastics research at Ocean Conservancy, spearheaded a global analysis revealing how macroplastics—items larger than five millimeters—kill marine animals through ingestion. The study, published last month in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, examined more than 10,000 necropsies across 95 species, including seabirds, sea turtles, and marine mammals. It found that one in five animals had plastic in their digestive tracts upon death, rising to one in two for sea turtles and one in three for seabirds. Nearly half of those with ingested plastics were threatened or endangered species.

Key thresholds vary by species and plastic type. For an Atlantic puffin, less than three sugar cubes' volume of plastic raises mortality risk by 90%; at 50% mortality, it's under one sugar cube. A loggerhead turtle faces similar risk from about two baseballs' worth, or half a baseball at the lower threshold. For a harbor porpoise, a soccer ball-sized mass can be fatal. Balloon rubber proved deadliest for seabirds, with six pea-sized pieces causing 90% mortality due to its stretchy nature blocking the gut. Sea turtles often mistake plastic bags for jellyfish, while abandoned fishing gear poses the greatest threat to marine mammals, attracting prey and causing entanglement or ingestion.

Murphy emphasized the policy implications in a recent Earth911 podcast interview. "At the end of the day, there is too much plastic in the ocean," she said, advocating reforms across the plastics life cycle, from production to disposal. Evidence shows interventions work: bag bans reduce beach plastics by 25 to 47%, per a Science study, and Hawaii's cleanups helped the monk seal population rebound. Ocean Conservancy's 40-year-old International Coastal Cleanup removed over a million plastic bags last year. To return ocean plastic leakage to 2010 levels, a 2020 study suggests a 40% cut in global production, 98-99% effective waste management, and cleanup of 40% of escaped waste.

The research also links to human health risks, citing a 2024 New England Journal of Medicine study finding microplastics in arterial plaque, increasing cardiovascular event risk 4.5-fold. Murphy views this as "part of the same crisis," with microplastics originating from macroplastics. Global treaty talks collapsed in 2025, but targeted actions like California's SB 54 and Florida's balloon bans offer progress amid annual ocean plastic inputs exceeding 11 million metric tons—equivalent to a garbage truck per minute.

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Illustration depicting microplastics accelerating atherosclerosis in male mice, contrasting with unaffected female mice, in a UC Riverside lab setting.
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Microplastics accelerate atherosclerosis in male mice, UC Riverside–led study finds

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A University of California, Riverside team reports that everyday microplastic exposure sped the buildup of arterial plaque in male—but not female—mice, pointing to possible sex-specific cardiovascular risks and endothelial cell vulnerability. The effects occurred without changes in body weight or cholesterol.

New research shows that very small quantities of ingested plastic can be fatal to marine life, with an Atlantic puffin facing a 90% chance of death from less than three sugar cubes' worth. The study, based on over 10,000 necropsies, highlights risks to seabirds, turtles, and mammals in oceans polluted by millions of tons of plastic annually. Findings also link similar plastics to human health issues like heart disease.

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A new study reveals that microplastics are disrupting the ocean's vital role in absorbing carbon dioxide, potentially exacerbating global warming. Researchers highlight how these tiny particles interfere with marine organisms and release greenhouse gases. The findings call for urgent global action to address plastic pollution alongside climate efforts.

A research team has outlined a fluorescence-based strategy designed to make microplastics and nanoplastics visible inside living organisms, potentially enabling real-time tracking of how the particles move, change and break down in biological systems.

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Researchers at NYU Langone Health reported detecting microplastics in prostate tumor tissue from a small group of men undergoing prostate removal surgery, with average concentrations about 2.5 times higher in tumor samples than in nearby noncancerous tissue. The team says the findings, scheduled for presentation Feb. 26, 2026, at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s Genitourinary Cancers Symposium, add early evidence that microplastic exposure could be relevant to prostate cancer but do not establish cause and effect.

Major beverage firms like Coca-Cola and PepsiCo have reduced their ambitious targets for recycled and reusable plastic packaging, even as recycling rates for PET bottles remain low at around 24% in the US. New policies and technologies offer some hope, but critics highlight ongoing environmental pollution from these brands. This update reflects four years of stalled progress since initial pledges.

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Researchers in Brazil have found dangerous levels of toxic metals such as barium and lead in popular plastic toys, with many products exceeding national and European safety limits. The study, which analyzed 70 toys sold in one major city, warns that even small amounts released during mouthing may pose health risks and calls for tighter regulation and oversight.

 

 

 

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