IANAL.
Not only is Plunker not CC-by-SA, I can't find any license or copyright terms on the site at all. In the absense of them, I believe all rights would remain with the original author (other than a fairly clearly implied grant of reproduction rights to Plunker!).
Assuming that's true (which is potentially fraught), my take is this:
If the indication is the post author wrote the plunk...
...then go ahead and edit the answer to put the code in the answer, ideally as a Stack Snippet where possible, but code blocks where not. Leave the Plunker link in. Say clearly in the edit summary what you're doing and why. The post author will get a notification of the edit. If they don't want that code on SO, they can remove it, although in that case I would argue they should delete the answer entirely. (That might go in a carefully-wordsmithed edit summary.)
I'd say that any plunk referenced by an answer that doesn't clearly say it's someone else's plunk fits in this category.
If the post author clearly says the plunk is someone else's...
...e.g. "I found this plunk that does it..." or similar, I still say go ahead and edit it into the answer. As slugster says here¹, SE works on good faith. If the original author is happy for the code to be on Plunker, odds are high they're happy for it to be on SO, too, with SO's CC-by-SA terms. If they aren't, and they become aware of SO's use of their code, they can ask SE to remove it. SE will do so. I suspect the need for this would be vanishingly small. They did, after all, put the code on a site that appears to give no guarantees about how it will be used.
Obviously, if you see something — such as a comment in the code — that conflicts with the above ("Only plunker can reproduce this!!"), respect the comment.
If the plunk no longer exists
Then remove the link, and flag and vote as appropriate for the answer without the link.
¹ (Not saying I agree with the overall analysis, and I certainly don't agree with the tone in the comments, but neither of us is a lawyer.)