---
title: "An Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross succumbs to ingesting Styrofoam in Brazil"
---

# An Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross succumbs to ingesting Styrofoam in Brazil

The field team of the Santos Basin Beach Monitoring Project ([Projeto de Monitoramento de Praias da Bacia de Santos](http://pmp.acad.univali.br/site/)) found the corpse of a [globally Endangered](http://datazone.birdlife.org/species/factsheet/22698425) Atlantic Yellow-Nosed Albatross *Thalassarche chlororhynchos* on Beach of the English (Praia dos Ingleses), Florianópolis, Santa Caterina Island, Brazil on 10 May this year.

 The bird, that appears to have been a juvenile based on a photograph showing an all-black bill, was then necropsied, revealing the stomach contained a large number of fragments of white Styrofoam (closed-cell extruded polystyrene foam), likely to have caused the bird’s demise.

 ![AYNA Styrofoam 2](https://www.acap.aq/images/stories/acap/Birds/Albatrosses/A/Atlantic_Yellow_nosed/AYNA-Styrofoam-2.jpg)

 Corpse of the juvenile Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross

 ![AYNA Styrofoam 3](https://www.acap.aq/images/stories/acap/Birds/Albatrosses/A/Atlantic_Yellow_nosed/AYNA-Styrofoam-3.jpg)

 The unopened stomach

 ![AYNA Styrofoam 1](https://www.acap.aq/images/stories/acap/Birds/Albatrosses/A/Atlantic_Yellow_nosed/AYNA-Styrofoam-1.jpg)

 The Styrofoam fragments are obvious in the opened stomach

 The Santos Basin Beach Monitoring Project aims to assess the possible impacts of oil production and disposal activities on birds, turtles and marine mammals by monitoring beaches and conducting veterinary care for live animals and undertaking necropsies of dead animals.

 Read more [here](https://www.facebook.com/associacaor3animal/?hc_ref=ARRemPWLP9xafD-91SX_0XLAI4vhG7Aliw9898OG_WpfhsdNT0A5W9fs87oonSxL4U4&fref=nf).

 A juvenile Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross was found with a shoe sole in its stomach on a Brazilian shore earlier in the year ([click here](https://www.acap.aq/en/news/latest-news/3018-test-2)).  It may be that recently fledged birds are more susceptible to swallowing foreign objects.

 *John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 19 June 2018*
