Dear MARMAM community,
My co-authors and I are pleased to announce our recent publication entitled:
*"Assessment of marine litter interaction in cetaceans stranded along the
Italian coastline and the Adriatic Sea"*.

The article is fully open access and available here:
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/marine-science/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1713820/full


**Abstract**Marine litter represents a growing threat to marine
biodiversity, particularly to cetaceans, yet its impacts on these sentinel
species remain insufficiently quantified. This study provides the first
comprehensive, transboundary assessment of litter ingestion in stranded
cetaceans along the Italian coastline and across the wider Adriatic basin,
including Croatia and Slovenia, between 2009 and 2023. Through harmonized
post-mortem examinations, and focusing on the period of consistent data
collection and analysis (2009-2023), this study documented plastic litter
ingestion in 2.9% of necropsied cetaceans in Italy and 3.7% in the broader
Adriatic subregion, with sperm whales (*Physeter macrocephalus*) showing
the highest frequency (50% FO) and susceptibility. In 11 cases, ingestion
was associated with health deterioration and mortality. The most commonly
ingested items were plastic sheets and fragments. The Italian Adriatic
subregion emerged as a hotspot for plastic interactions, reflecting
regional hydrodynamics and anthropogenic pressures. Applying criteria from
regional and international frameworks, the results showed that 60% of *P.
macrocephalus* had ingested more than 1 kg of plastic, with 40% exhibiting
harmful effects. These data provide baseline values that can serve as
reference points for proposing thresholds to achieve Good Environmental
Status under the Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Despite these results
supporting the use of sperm whales as suitable sentinel species for
monitoring macroplastic pollution, the available data are limited to Italy
and influenced by distributional patterns and unusual mortality events. A
combined approach, where *T. truncatu*s is monitored for its broad spatial
representativeness and *P. macrocephalus *for its ecological
susceptibility, may be a useful strategy to guide further research and
inform management measures in the future. These findings underscore the
need for standardized monitoring protocols, enhanced cross-border data
sharing, and policy measures to mitigate plastic impacts. This work
provides crucial baseline knowledge for conservation planning and
reinforces the role of cetaceans as indicators of ecosystem health in the
Mediterranean.

Please feel free to contact me with any questions.
Many thanks
Guido

-- 

Guido Pietroluongo, DVM, MSc, PhD

Department of Comparative Biomedicine and Food Science - University of Padova
Cetaceans strandings Emergency Response Team (CERT)
Mediterranean Marine Mammal Tissue Bank (https://marinemammals.bca.unipd.it/)

AGRIPOLIS - Ed. Museo
Viale dell'Università 16
35020 - Legnaro (PD)


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