“…Therefore, moving beyond ingestion studies of macro-plastics (plastic particles >5 mm following the descriptions in Rochman et al, 2019), research efforts to inform policy are increasingly being directed toward understanding the fate, transport, and toxicity of plastics through seabird research (Provencher et al, 2020). This is because seabirds play an important role at the interface of the aquatic and terrestrial environment by transporting nutrients and pollutants (Jones et al, 2022). For over two decades, seabirds have been identified as long-range transport mechanisms for contaminants (Blais, 2005;Idowu et al, 2013) and thereby serve as important indicators for both the fate and transport of emerging contaminants of concern including plastics (e.g., Mallory and Braune, 2012;Provencher et al, 2018;Bourdages et al, 2020).…”