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New disease caused by plastic found in birds for the first time


By PA News

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Scientists have found a new disease in wild birds caused solely by plastic pollution.

Termed plasticosis, the disease is caused by small pieces of plastic inflaming the digestive tract.

It is thought that seabirds eat the plastic when fishing and then accidentally feed it directly to their chicks.

Over time, the persistent inflammation scars and deforms the tissue and the birds struggle to digest food and grow properly, affecting their ability to survive.

A team of scientists from Australia and the UK decided to name the new disease after seeing widespread scarring in flesh-footed shearwater birds on Australia’s Lord Howe Island.

They noticed that birds that had eaten more plastic had more scarring to the proventriculus organ – the first part of a bird’s stomach.

Dr Alex Bond of the Natural History Museum, who co-authored the study said: “While these birds can look healthy on the outside, they’re not doing well on the inside.”

“This study is the first time that stomach tissue has been investigated in this way and shows that plastic consumption can cause serious damage to these birds’ digestive system.”

Tubular glands in part of the birds’ stomachs are becoming scarred by plastic pollution, damaging their chances of survival (University of Tasmania/PA)
Tubular glands in part of the birds’ stomachs are becoming scarred by plastic pollution, damaging their chances of survival (University of Tasmania/PA)

Publishing their work in the Journal of Hazardous Materials, the researchers found that other inorganic items found in the birds’ guts, such as pumice stones, do not contribute to such scarring.

Characterised as a fibrotic disease, which is defined by scarring to the tissue, plasticosis can lead to the gradual breakdown of tubular glands in the proventriculus.

Affected birds become more vulnerable to infection and parasites and struggle to properly digest food and absorb vitamins.

While plasticosis has only been identified in one bird species, the researchers said that because of the scale of plastic pollution, it may be much more widespread.

It is estimated that there are 30 million tonnes of plastic waste in the world’s oceans, with a further 109 million tonnes in rivers that will continue to leak into the sea for decades.

An OECD report published last year said production of plastic has doubled worldwide in the last 20 years, with only 9% of it being successfully recycled and 22% mismanaged and left to pollute the environment.

In the UK it is estimated that five million tonnes of plastic are used every year, nearly half of which is packaging.

The Government has said it will introduce a bottle-return scheme from 2025 and a ban on single-use plastic plates, trays, bowls, cutlery, balloon sticks and polystyrene containers from October.

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