When the King penguin meets macroplastics: A first case reported in the Crozet archipelago, Southern Indian Ocean

Mar Pollut Bull. 2024 Oct 10;209(Pt A):117093. doi: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2024.117093. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Plastics are one of the major forms of anthropogenic pollution. This waste can affect the individual survival in many species, including seabirds. The Southern Ocean ecosystems are thought to be less affected by this pollution, due to the low human presence and the natural protective barrier provided by southern oceanic fronts. Here, we report the first observation of macroplastic ingestion in two dead King penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus) in the Crozet archipelago located south of these fronts. There is no evidence that the macroplastic fragments found in their stomach were the direct cause of death. We suggest that they were ingested by being confused with stones they used for food grinding. Although it is difficult to assess the local or distant origin of these macroplastics, efforts to collect waste from sites as remote as the subantarctic islands must become standard practice to ensure that such ingestions do not become commonplace.

Keywords: Aptenodytes patagonicus; Oceanic Front; Plastics; Pollution; Seabirds; Southern Indian Ocean; Subantarctic islands.