“…For instance, pieces of plastic bags, a plastic bowl, pieces of rope, polyethylene sheets, wrappers, bottle caps, plastic ribbons, and even a badminton shuttlecock have been found in dolphinfish from the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean (Manooch et al, 1983;Massutí et al, 1998;Vaske Junior and Lessa, 2004;Rudeershausen et al, 2010;Vanghese et al, 2013;Choy and Drazen, 2013;Brewton et al, 2016;Menezes et al, 2019). This large epipelagic species is known to be a voracious top predator, feeding on a wide range of pelagic and demersal organisms, including cephalopods, crustaceans, and several fish belonging to the Carangidae, Balistidae, Tetraodontidae, Exocoetidae, and Scombridae families (Massutí, et al, 1998;Carbonell et al, 1999;Varghese et al, 2013;Brewton et al, 2016). This ingestion of a wide range of prey, which has been associated with the dolphinfish's opportunistic, voracious feeding nature, can increase the probability of the passive intake of plastic through prey (i.e., secondary ingestion), especially in large predatory fish such as the dolphinfish (Massutí et al, 1998;Varghese et al, 2013;Alomar et al, 2017;Neto et al, 2020).…”