Disturbing Photo Shows a Black Skimmer Feeding a Cigarette Butt to Its Chick

The image confirms what many researchers have long suspected鈥攖hat wild birds mistake the pervasive and harmful litter for food.

At least twice a week during the summer, volunteer Karen Mason visits St. Pete Beach to deter beach-goers from entering fragile nesting sites. When she鈥檚 not busy shooing away dogs or educating vacationers about the importance of听sharing the shore, Mason听enjoys snapping photographs of the听Black Skimmers听she works to protect.听

But last month, while photographing her big-billed subjects, Mason听captured an adult Skimmer听feeding its chick something that didn鈥檛听look like a fish鈥攐r anything else she recognized.听Later, after she got home and blew up the听photo to听reveal the mysterious object, she couldn't believe what she saw: The chick was holding a听cigarette butt.听

Mason says she didn't see if the听chick ate the butt,听but听just the sight听of the baby bird with a听filter听in its beak was听enough to anger her.听鈥淭here鈥檚 no excuse for it,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 don't know if people don鈥檛 realize how toxic cigarette butts are or that they鈥檙e not really biodegradable, but it just really upset me.鈥澨

Each year, trillions of cigarette filters end up as听litter worldwide.听The chemical-laden butts听are made of a plastic called听cellulose acetate听and consistently in trash removed during environmental cleanups. But those efforts, as important听as they are, don't even come close to听solving听the problem. 鈥淭hat's a drop in the bucket,鈥 蝉补测蝉听, CEO of the Cigarette Pollution Project, a nonprofit made up of various public health and environmental groups.听

From roadsides to remote hiking trails,听cigarette butts are ubiquitous. In听urban areas, where they are听mindlessly听tossed aside on sidewalks and streets,听butts are an especially pervasive problem. And when it rains,听they can flow with runoff down storm drains and out into waterways and the听open听ocean. Eventually many of these butts end up on beaches,听where seabirds and shorebirds might听mistake them for food, just as they do with plastics.听听

Studies have shown cigarette butts to听have negative impacts on a variety of animals,听but so far there's been little research on whether wild birds eat discarded filters or if they are听poisoned by them. The scant听evidence that does exist points to a high likelihood on both fronts.听Pet birds, for example,听have been known to eat butts out of their owners鈥 ashtrays, and the results are dire.听, a veterinarian at Niles Animal Hospital and Bird Medical Center in Illinois, once examined an African Gray Parrot that died from organ failure due to chemical poisoning after听eating used filters.听鈥淚 always tell people to keep birds away from cigarette butts,鈥 Sakas says, 鈥渂ecause it could happen.鈥

The likely consumption of cigarette butts isn't just limited to shorebirds. Any generalist听species with an indiscriminate听diet could wind up with filters for food. What's worse, the addition of听flavored tobacco products may attract birds with their fruity smells, says Novotny, who the environmental impacts of tobacco as a professor at San听Diego State University.听

Even when they don鈥檛 cause death in wildlife, eating cigarette butts can lead to nausea, vomiting, and seizures, Novotny says.Birds might be at a greater risk听because their small size and fast metabolism means they absorb nicotine and other chemicals faster, requiring听

Simply being in contact with the butts could also pose issues for birds. House Sparrows and House Finches have learned to adapt to the听littered landscape, incorporating filters into their nests to help听. But research shows that handling the toxin-concentrated fibers with their beaks likely causes , which could lead to cancer in longer-lived birds.听

Cigarette butts aren't just a hazard for hungry animals: They can also end up in the mouths of toddlers. And while filters reduce the amount of tar in cigarette smoke, research shows they make it easier to take deep drags and draw carcinogenic particles further into the lungs. This gives smokers a false sense of protection, even though the rise of cigarette filters coincides with a rise in an aggressive form of called adenocarcinoma.听听

Because of their status as听both a public health and environmental concern,听there has been to听outright ban听cigarette butts.听Most recently, California State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson a bill to听ban single-use filters in the state. In response to the increasing pressure, tobacco companies have started looking into . Previous attempts to create eco-friendly听filters have sputtered, though, and these听solutions still ignore the public health issues.

In the meantime, evidence like Mason's Black Skimmer photograph can convince individuals to take action against cigarette butt pollution. Since her听picture went viral, people have dedicated beach cleanups to the chick and told Mason that they would be more mindful of where they put their smoking byproducts. "It's not going to be everybody," Mason says, "but听every little bit helps."

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