Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/121008
Title: Anthropogenic litter in terrestrial flora and fauna: Is the situation as bad as in the ocean? A field study in Southern Germany on five meadows and 150 ruminants in comparison with marine debris
Authors: Meyer, Gabriele
Puig Lozano,Raquel Patricia 
Fernández Rodríguez, Antonio Jesús 
UNESCO Clasification: 240106 Ecología animal
241713 Ecología vegetal
Issue Date: 2023
Journal: Environmental Pollution 
Abstract: In contrast to the abundance of research on marine debris, terrestrial anthropogenic litter and its impacts are largely lacking scientific attention. Therefore, the main objective of the present study is to find out whether ingested litter produces pathological consequences to the health of domestic ruminants, as it does in their relatives in the ocean, the cetaceans. For this purpose, five meadows (49◦18′ N, 10◦24′ E) with a total survey area of 139,050 m2 as well as the gastric content of 100 laughtered cattle and 50 slaughtered sheep have been examined for persistent man-made debris in Northern Bavaria, Germany. All the five meadows contained garbage, and plastics were always part of it. Including glass and metal, 521 persistent anthropogenic objects were detected altogether, equalling a litter density of 3747 items per km2. Of the examined animals, 30.0% of the cattle and 6.0% of the sheep harboured anthropogenic foreign bodies in their gastric tract. As in the case of cetaceans, plastics were the most dominant litter material. Bezoars had formed around plastic fibres of agricultural origin in two young bulls, whereas pointed metal objects were associated in cattle with traumatic lesions in the reticulum and the tongue. Of all the ingested anthropogenic debris, 24 items (26.4%) had direct equivalents in the studied meadows. Comparing with marine litter, 28 items (30.8%) were also present in marine environments and 27 items (29.7%) were previously reported as foreign bodies in marine animals. At least in this study region, waste pollution affected terrestrial environments and domestic animals, with clear equivalents in the marine world. Ingested foreign bodies produced lesions that may have reduced the animals’ welfare and, regarding commercial purposes, their productivity.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/121008
ISSN: 0269-7491
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.121304
Source: Environmental Pollution [ISSN0269-7491], v. 323
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