Abstract

One of the most conspicuous marks of the Anthropocene worldwide is the ubiquitous pollution by long lifespan materials (e.g., plastic). In marine habitats, anthropogenic debris are observed from floating on the surface to deposited on the substrate or ingested by wildlife at different food web levels. However, the link between feeding strategy types and debris ingestion by reef fishes remains poorly explored. We analyzed the gut contents of three nominally herbivorous fishes along the Brazilian coast: the doctorfish Acanthurus chirurgus, the parrotfish, Sparisoma axillare, and the chub Kyphosus vaigiensis. Individual [i.e., total length (TL)] and species-level functional traits, as well sites with distinct environmental features (i.e., tourism activity intensity, fishing pressure, and distance from the coast), were tested as predictors of the concentration of debris found inside individual fish guts. Debris found were quantified, measured, and classified accordingly to color and shape. We found debris in 52.7% of individuals. Debris ranged from 0.10 to 11.75 mm, and the frequency of occurrence and ingestion rate (number of debris per individual) varied among species, being higher for the scraper species S. axillare (95.7% and 4.9 ± 1.2, respectively) and A. chirurgus (74.6% and 1.64 ± 0.34), than for the browser K. vaigiensis (55.8% and 0.83 ± 0.24). TL, scraping feeding mode, and the most impacted location were positively related to debris ingestion rate. Our work revealed a higher vulnerability of an ecologically important trophic group to debris ingestion and of an already threatened species according to Brazilian red list. Besides the increasing number of species contaminated by anthropogenic debris, its effect on fish biology and physiology remains poorly understood. Understanding these links would improve conservation planning as species contamination could act as a proxy for environmental pollution on marine habitats.

Highlights

  • The human footprints onto the planet are recent on a geological scale but already left such clear and distinct marks on land, oceans, and atmosphere that the present epoch is known as the Anthropocene (Lewis and Maslin, 2015)

  • We found a total of 409 particles, either fibers (96.1%), or fragments (3.9%)

  • One of the main issues while comparing studies on anthropogenic debris ingestion is the wide array of units used (Collard et al, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

The human footprints onto the planet are recent on a geological scale but already left such clear and distinct marks on land, oceans, and atmosphere that the present epoch is known as the Anthropocene (Lewis and Maslin, 2015). One of the most conspicuous marks of the Anthropocene is pollution by long-lasting man-made materials (e.g., plastic), affecting terrestrial. Ecological Traits Influencing Debris Ingestion and aquatic environments (Derraik, 2002), spreading through food webs, and becoming a source of contamination even to humans (Rochman et al, 2015; Cox et al, 2019). The durability and slow degradation of plastics allow the fragmentation of this material into smaller pieces, facilitating dispersion throughout the environment. Plastic debris reduce the esthetic value of beaches (Corraini et al, 2018), causing economic losses, besides affecting wildlife through contamination following its degradation

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