6533b832fe1ef96bd129ae9c
RESEARCH PRODUCT
LID - 10.3791/59466 [doi]
Doğan SözbilenYakup KaskaFrançoise ClaroOlfa ChaiebDelphine GambaianiGiuseppe A. DeluciaYasmina RodríguezJesús TomásAna L. LozaGaëlle DarmonMohamed Nejmeddine BradaiClaude MiaudChristopher K. PhamMarco MatiddiJudicaëlle MoussierCecilia SilvestriDaniela GentaCatherine TsangarisAndrea CameddaFrederic VandeperreFrederic VandeperreOhiana RevueltaRoberto DaffinaRaffaella PiermariniMarco PisapiaHelen Kaberisubject
Litter (animal)Marine litter010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesnecropsyGood Environmental StatusGeneral Chemical Engineering010501 environmental sciences01 natural scienceslaw.inventionEatinglawMarine debrisIngestionanimalTurtle (robot)Plastic ingestionmedia_commonbiologyGeneral NeuroscienceData Collectiongood environmental statusTurtlesSea turtleplastic ingestionEnvironmental Monitoringmarine litterEcAp processinformation processingGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyDry weightmedia_common.cataloged_instanceAnimalsNecropsy14. Life underwaterMSFDEuropean unionEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesecosystemGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyAnimals; *Data Collection; Eating; *Ecosystem; *Environmental Monitoring; Gastrointestinal Tract/physiology; Turtles/*physiologythresholdsturtleSea turtlebiology.organism_classificationeatingEnvironmental sciencesGood environmental statusFisheryGastrointestinal TractIssue 147physiologyThresholds[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyEnvironmental Sciencesdescription
The following protocol is intended to respond to the requirements set by the European Union’s Marine Strategy Framework Directives (MSFD) for the D10C3 Criteria reported in the Commission Decision (EU), related to the amount of litter ingested by marine animals. Standardized methodologies for extracting litter items ingested from dead sea turtles along with guidelines on data analysis are provided. The protocol starts with the collection of dead sea turtles and classification of samples according to the decomposition status. Turtle necropsy must be performed in authorized centers and the protocol described here explains the best procedure for gastrointestinal (GI) tract isolation. The three parts of the GI (esophagus, stomach, intestine) should be separated, opened lengthways and contents filtered using a 1 mm mesh sieve. The article describes the classification and quantification of ingested litter, classifying GI contents into seven different categories of marine litter and two categories of natural remains. The quantity of ingested litter should be reported as total dry mass (weight in grams, with two decimal places) and abundance (number of items). The protocol proposes two possible scenarios to achieve the Good Environmental Status (GES). First: “There should be less than X% of sea turtles having Y g or more plastic in the GI in samples of 50-100 dead turtles from each sub-region”, where Y is the average weight of plastic ingested and X% is the percentage of sea turtles with more weight (in grams) of plastic than Y. The second one, which considers the food remain versus plastic as a proxy of individual health, is: “There should be less than X% of sea turtles having more weight of plastic (in grams) than food remains in the GI in samples of 50-100 dead turtles from each sub-region”. © 2019 Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-01-01 | Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE |