Polymer identification of plastic marine debris can help identify its sources, degradation,
and fate. We optimized and validated a fast, simple, and accessible technique, attenuated
total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR FT-IR), to identify
polymers contained in plastic ingested by sea turtles. Spectra of consumer good items
with known resin identification codes #1-6 and several #7 plastics were compared to
standard and raw manufactured polymers. High temperature size exclusion chromatography
measurements confirmed ATR FT-IR could differentiate these polymers. High-density
(HDPE) and low-density polyethylene (LDPE) discrimination is challenging but a clear
step-by-step guide is provided that identified 78% of ingested PE samples. The optimal
cleaning methods consisted of wiping ingested pieces with water or cutting. Of 828
ingested plastics pieces from 50 Pacific sea turtles, 96% were identified by ATR FT-IR
as HDPE, LDPE, unknown PE, polypropylene (PP), PE and PP mixtures, polystyrene, polyvinyl
chloride, and nylon.