id,collection,dc.contributor.author[],dc.date.issued[],dc.date.submitted[],dc.description.abstract,dc.description.nhm[],dc.description.nhm[en],dc.embargo[en_US],dc.identifier.citation[en],dc.identifier.doi[en_US],dc.identifier.issn[en_US],dc.identifier.journal[en_US],dc.identifier.startpage[en_US],dc.identifier.uri[],dc.identifier.volume[en_US],dc.publisher[en_US],dc.rights.uri[*],dc.rights[en],dc.subject.nhm[en],dc.title[en_US],dc.type[],elements.import.author[en_US],html.description.abstract[],pubs.organisational-group[],refterms.dateFOA[] "576667","10141/582240","Grant, ML::5b25d877cf8b78807add2f59feea7061::500||Lavers, JL::5750c5f2ef2c7446a64a1c2089502cac::500||Stuckenbrock, S::b6b3293b80f77159fb0b0a299e24b405::500||Sharp, PB::d6cf4601eb830538d94a496b92b97b32::500||Bond, AL::0727feddb5bf177fdceced5570444557::600","2018-10-11","2018-10-25","Marine debris is pervasive worldwide, and affects biota negatively. We compared the characteristics of debris incorporated within brown booby (Sula leucogaster) nests throughout their pantropical distribution by assessing the type, colour and mass of debris items within nests and in beach transects at 18 sites, to determine if nests are indicators of the amount of debris in local marine environments. Debris was present in 14.4% of nests surveyed, with the proportion of nests with debris varying among sites (range: 0–100%). There was minimal overlap between the type or colour of debris found in nests and on adjacent beaches at individual sites. This suggests that brown boobies do not select debris uniformly across their distribution. We propose that the nests of brown boobies can be used as a sentinel of marine debris pollution of their local environment.","NHM Repository","© 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. The attached document is the author(’s’) final accepted/submitted version of the journal article. You are advised to consult the publisher’s version if you wish to cite from it.","Not known","Megan L. Grant, Jennifer L. Lavers, Silke Stuckenbrock, Paul B. Sharp, Alexander L. Bond, The use of anthropogenic marine debris as a nesting material by brown boobies (Sula leucogaster), Marine Pollution Bulletin, Volume 137, 2018, Pages 96-103, ISSN 0025-326X, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2018.10.016. (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0025326X18307173)","10.1016/j.marpolbul.2018.10.016","0025-326X","Marine Pollution Bulletin","96 - 103","http://hdl.handle.net/10141/622420","137","Elsevier","http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/","embargoedAccess","Environmental indicator||Litter||Nesting ecology||Pantropical oceans||Plastic pollution||Seabirds","The use of anthropogenic marine debris as a nesting material by brown boobies (Sula leucogaster)","Journal Article","Grant, ML||Lavers, JL||Stuckenbrock, S||Sharp, PB||Bond, AL","Marine debris is pervasive worldwide, and affects biota negatively. We compared the characteristics of debris incorporated within brown booby (Sula leucogaster) nests throughout their pantropical distribution by assessing the type, colour and mass of debris items within nests and in beach transects at 18 sites, to determine if nests are indicators of the amount of debris in local marine environments. Debris was present in 14.4% of nests surveyed, with the proportion of nests with debris varying among sites (range: 0–100%). There was minimal overlap between the type or colour of debris found in nests and on adjacent beaches at individual sites. This suggests that brown boobies do not select debris uniformly across their distribution. We propose that the nests of brown boobies can be used as a sentinel of marine debris pollution of their local environment.","/Natural History Museum||/Natural History Museum/Science Group||/Natural History Museum/Science Group/Functional groups||/Natural History Museum/Science Group/Functional groups/Collections||/Natural History Museum/Science Group/Functional groups/Collections/LS Collections||/Natural History Museum/Science Group/Life Sciences||/Natural History Museum/Science Group/Life Sciences/Vertebrates||/Natural History Museum/Science Group/Life Sciences/Vertebrates/Vertebrates – Collections","2018-12-13T14:50:32Z"