Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Belugas polluted with microplastics through prey

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2021 12:05 PM
  • Belugas polluted with microplastics through prey

VANCOUVER - Hundreds of thousands of tiny bits of plastic waste have been found in the stomachs of belugas, proving that the pollution is making its way even to the most remote Arctic waters, a new study says.

In the study, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, researchers looked at five species of Arctic fish that are regular prey of belugas and found 21 per cent of them had microplastic particles in their gastrointestinal tracts.

The lead author of the study, Rhiannon Moore, said this finding confirmed that microplastics are moving up the food chain.

"It's a worry because plastic, as we know, is everywhere, and we don't really know the long-term effect of all the different types of plastic that are ending up in these species," she said in an interview.

Moore, who recently completed a master of science degree at Simon Fraser University and is a zero-waste outreach co-ordinator with the City of Victoria, said many northern animals are encountering environmental change.

"So, we have species that are experiencing the effects of climate change, increased marine traffic, migration patterns — all sorts of changes. And so this is just another ... human-made impact that that's occurring."

Microplastics are contaminants that are less than five millimetres in size.

Almost 80 per cent of the particles found in the stomachs of fish studied come from textiles and clothing that are washed into waterways in the laundry process, the report said.

There is evidence that tiny bacteria make these fibres their home, increasing their palatability for fish, it added.

The study documents microplastics in the stomachs of fish from the Eastern Beaufort Sea, north of Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Alaska.

The seven belugas used in the study were those that are seasonally hunted by members of the Inuvialuit community of Tuktoyaktuk in the western Canadian Arctic.

The study said the Arctic deep sea has been identified as a potential source of plastic accumulation.

Belugas are known to dive to depths greater than 1,000 metres and spend "significant" time at the sea floor bottom, it said.

"How climate change will influence beluga foraging behaviour and activity in the deep sea, and the associated exposure to plastic debris remains unclear," the report said.

Peter Ross, a senior scientist with the Raincoast Conservation Foundation and a co-author of the report, said evidence suggests that microplastics in the Arctic are largely making their way on currents from the Atlantic Ocean.

"The Arctic communities are not really big players in contaminating their backyard," he said.

"So, we have yet again another example of a pollutant from the more urbanized and industrialized south moving quickly and readily into the Arctic."

There is "near universal contamination" of the water in the Arctic, he said.

Moore said she was "not necessarily surprised" by the findings because of the large quantities of plastic that enter the oceans every year.

But she said she is hoping that the discovery spurs people into taking action.

"Everyone loves whales, and nobody really wants whales to be threatened in any way," Moore said.

"Whenever you talk about whales and pollution, it tugs on their heartstrings and so you would hope that this would cause people to act and look at daily life choices."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Electric vehicles will deplete oil demand: report

Electric vehicles will deplete oil demand: report
The International Institute for Sustainable Development has released a new study outlining how long-term demand for oil will be driven down by global targets to cut carbon-related pollution and the shift toward putting more vehicles on the road powered by batteries and alternative fuels.

Electric vehicles will deplete oil demand: report

Vaccine passports might be unjust: Ombudsperson

Vaccine passports might be unjust: Ombudsperson
A statement from the office of B.C.'s ombudsperson says vaccination certification programs are being explored in B.C. and in jurisdictions across Canada.

Vaccine passports might be unjust: Ombudsperson

Vancouver Police arrest Rajesh Narayan after a 59-year-old man was stabbed to death in an east-side home Saturday morning.

Vancouver Police arrest Rajesh Narayan after a 59-year-old man was stabbed to death in an east-side home Saturday morning.
When officers arrived, they found the victim suffering from multiple stab wounds. Rajesh Narayan, 38, was arrested on Saturday by VPD officers and is now charged with second degree murder.

Vancouver Police arrest Rajesh Narayan after a 59-year-old man was stabbed to death in an east-side home Saturday morning.

B.C. woman hurt in attack by three wolf dogs

B.C. woman hurt in attack by three wolf dogs
They say the woman entered a secure pen on Tuesday where the animals were housed, as she had many times before, and for unknown reasons they attacked her.

B.C. woman hurt in attack by three wolf dogs

289 COVID cases for Tuesday

289 COVID cases for Tuesday
2,927,487 doses of Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines have been administered to adults 18 and over in B.C., 148,580 of which are second doses. 

289 COVID cases for Tuesday

Ottawa planning to send health workers to Manitoba

Ottawa planning to send health workers to Manitoba
More than 1,200 cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in Manitoba over the long weekend, giving the province the unwelcome distinction of having the highest new infection rate in North America.    

Ottawa planning to send health workers to Manitoba