“…Once plastics are ingested by sea turtles, either actively (i.e., by mistaking plastic residues for pray), indirectly (feeding on animals which previously ingested plastics), or accidentally (Schuyler et al, 2016;Nelms et al, 2018), they mainly accumulate within the gastrointestinal tract, due to the inability of the animal to regurgitate items (Matiddi et al, 2017;Wilcox et al, 2018;Santos et al, 2020). Several studies have already investigated the presence of plastic pollution in different species of sea turtles, but the vast majority of them were performed on gastric contents taken from dead animals (Caron et al, 2018;Duncan et al, 2019;Digka et al, 2020;López-Martínez et al, 2020). Besides leaving a considerable gap of knowledge in monitoring the actual plastic contamination of live animals, it has been pointed out that the sole observation of the upper part of the intestinal tract, taken during necroscopy, can underestimate the real magnitude of plastic ingestion by the animal (Bjorndal et al, 1994;Pham et al, 2017).…”