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. 2018 Nov 6;8:16422. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-34590-6

Table 2.

Application of analysis workflow to fish gastrointestinal tract contents20.

Step Process Number of items Reason for change in numbers
Affected by processing step Taken to next processing step
Total Fibres Particles Total Fibres Particles %b
1 Visual separation 200 164 36
2 Measurement and photography 0 0 0 200 164 36 100
3 Chemical characterisation 11 (−5, −6) 8 3 189 156 33 95 missing, too small for ATR-FTIR; removed
4 Library interpretation of spectra 12 8 4 177 148 29 89 <60% match removed
5 Visual inspection of spectra 5 3 2 172 145 27 86 between 60 and <70% match, and very poor visual match; removed
6 Contamination check 71 68 3 ≥90% match to contaminant library
7 Visual inspection of photographs 19 19 0 153 126 27 77 visual match to contaminant; removed
8 Chemical type assignment 38 14 24 115 112 3 58 natural origin could not be excluded; removed
Number of marine microdebris items 115 112 3 58

The workflow is tailored to quantifying microdebris contamination, and applied to the gastrointestinal tract contents of 20 similarly-sized juvenile coral trout (Plectropomus leopardus and P. maculatus) collected on reefs around four reef islands in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area, Australia, in 2011. The number of items affected by and taken to the next processing step of the analysis workflow, and the reason for a reduction in numbers is given; bpercentage based on total items separated using visual examination (n = 200).