Plastic pollution and the Great Pacific Garbage Patch
73Plastic pollution is a threat to sea creatures
Plastic is something we all use and so very many things are made of it or packaged in the material, but unfortunately a vast amount of it is getting thrown away in an irresponsible way and is becoming an ever greater danger to the environment. Plastic bags blow about and litter the countryside, plastic bottles and other objects wash up on the tides having become part of the flotsam, landfill sites contain increasing amounts of plastic.
But perhaps something a lot of people don't realise is how dangerous to wildlife the plastic that pollutes the sea is. Marine turtles, many of which are already endangered, mistake plastic bags bobbing about on the waves as jellyfish, and if they swallow them they can die because the plastic cannot be digested and can block the poor animals' digestive systems. A similar thing happens if sea birds mistake plastic items for food and feed this junk to their chicks.
I have actually seen examples of this at a gull colony on the Island of Flatholm in the Bristol Channel off the coast of South Wales. Gulls scavenge rubbish tips on the mainland and bring food back for the baby birds. I saw plastic toy fried eggs, bits of broken plastic dolls and other toys as some of the stuff the parent birds wrongly identified.
If the chicks swallow this rubbish it can kill them just like the turtles. Rare and already endangered marine birds like many of the albatross species can fall victims to this.
Garbage Patch photos
Great Pacific Garbage Patch
There exists an area in the oceans known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, the Eastern Garbage Patch and the Pacific Trash Vortex that has been created by the accumulation of plastic and other debris carried on the currents and held there in the North Pacific Gyre. It is so big that it is said to be nearly twice the size of the state of Texas.
As some of the plastic disintegrates over time and smaller particles of plastic become smaller still they eventually become small enough to be eaten by marine life and thus, in turn, are eaten by larger animals and so it enters the food chain.
Meanwhile worldwide very tiny granules of plastic are becoming a constituent of sand.
Another problem floating plastic in the sea can cause is it can be used as a base for some invasive species to attach to and then get carried to other parts of the world on the tides.
So how does all this plastic get in the sea to begin with? People carelessly throw plastic litter on beaches. Others throw plastic refuse out of boats and ships. More plastic debris washes down the rivers and into the sea. Wikipedia says that 80% is from land-based sources and the remaining 20% is plastic thrown away at sea.
Adventurer and environmental campaigner David de Rothschild is sailing a raft called the Plastiki built from plastic bottles to raise awareness of the problem of pollution for plastic and to suggest that we need to recycle the material. He will be passing the Great Pacific Garbage Patch en route from San Franciso to Sydney in Australia.
I believe that as many people as possible do need to be told about this fantastic mess that endangers life. We all need to think about what happens to the plastic we throw away. I know it really saddens me to think it could end up killing a turtle or a baby gull or albatross.
Copyright © 2010 Steve Andrews. All Rights Reserved.
Plastic at sea links
The Garbage Patch
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Excellent treatment of an important topic. Here in Florida we often see birds and other wildlife in distress caught by senseless plastic discards and struggling for their lives.
I really hate those plastic garbage bags with a passion and think they're one of the worst inventions EVER. I try to pick them up when I see them but they're just everywhere. You should see (some of) the Caribbean Islands - it's pretty bad there because of the island breezes and of course they all end up in the ocean. I just find it so amazing that in this day and age, with everything we know, people still litter.
Climate change is nonsense; here's something undeniable that man is doing to the planet. We can all get behind this cleanup.
Toxic plastic pollution is a current and future killer of many species on the planet. Much of it is not re-cycled and winds up in landfills. As the oil demand for transportation goes down, it will go up in making more toxic plastic.
As long as profit stays more important than the environment, the inhabitants, including us will suffer for it.
We can buy glass, cardboard and metal containers to combat the rise of plastic. Wax paper could easily replace plastic for meats and many foods. In the end, it is up to us.
Excellent hub on a very important subject! I always pick up plastic when I see it lying about, too. I also remember the glass bottle days, and although I remember the distinct sense of relief when dropping a bottle and realizing it was plastic and wouldn't shatter, it may be better than dealing with plastic!
We are such litter bugs
I read about this a while back. Is Rothschild the right oil heir, who refused to go into Oil after sailing his yacht through this? May not be, but there is certainly a very rich man who has turned his back on his fathers oil business to concentrate on raising awareness. Good, but very sad, hub.
Arrhhh..... Banking, thats it. Well it is very commendable. Bard, do you know whether there are any plans afoot to attempt to clean this mess up? Or would that be a wasted effort, e.g. are we still polluting in this fashion? Please excuse my ignorance on this subject - at least I recycle my plastic ;-)
Your ideals sound perfect, but you and me both know that a world without war will not exist unless the human race exterminates itself. Which I guess we are doing. I have often thought about doing some voluntary conservation work, thats something that I will pursue once I have found a job which pays the bills. Anyway, I dont want to waste any more of your time Bard, I will let you get on with your many diverse interests and hobbies ;) thank you for taking your time to respond.
You know I didnt even have a clue about the Island of plastic or the garbage patch until I was watching I think it was "Knocked Up" the movie. In it they have a over pretective mother talking about the things in the enviroment that are going to harm her children such as petifiles and so on. She made a quick referance to the Island in the pacific twice the size of texas made of plastic. I thought Yea Rite. So doing what I do. I got on line to look. It was kind of hard to find which suprised me. Something like this should be known by everyone, instead its known by very few. My point is, I am an average American well I used to be, not caring where my soda bottle went or wawa bag was thrown but ill tell you one thing I care now. If it took me two seconds on the internet to change my view. Imagine what it would do if the entire world knew. The thing about pollution is that its got to get real bad before anyone takes notice to make it better; sad I know, but unfortunately its true with most people. Thank you for letting people know about the Island of plastic I hope you get the word out someone needs to.
It scares me greatly to consider what all our one time usage of plastic (and how it is being disposed of) is doing to marine life. We use plastic, it breaks down into tiny pieces, it is ingested by marine life, we eat marine life = we are eating plastic. Great hub, gets me thinking for sure.
Thanks for this Bard. I've blogged on this problem too and it really is serious. The garbage dump is not the size off Texas and still growing and since it is in international waters, no governments are willing to take responsibility for it. Ships dump waste overboard and a platic bottle that is dropped into a storm sewer in San Francisco ends up in the Pacific gyre in about two weeks. The situation is ghastly and really attention must be paid. Good work!
oops-- just came back and saw the big typo in my previous comment-- that should have been "the garbage dump is now the size of Texas" I should proofread my comments-- sorry Bard:-)
It's tragic how we choke up all of Nature's arteries with stuff like plastic! To think those chicks die because of it! Man really is the aberration in Nature, isn't he?
Hi Bard - I'm the Aussie film-maker preparing to swim across the Pacific and through the Garbage Patch. Thanks for spreading the word.
its not plastic or people, its years of just taking trash out to sea and dumping it.
Only a total idiot wouldn't know this wouldn't happen.
or someone totally evil. or both.
it's frightening whats happening to our enviroment, thanks for an interesting read.
your ideas sound perfect ...........i was greatly in need of it..thanks a lot 4 this useful article...
I knew about Plastiki from EuroNews, but never knew that there are areas such as Great Pacific Garbage ! Platiki project is admirable, but we need to do more than this. Actually a lot less... let's not throw plastic everywhere !
Voted this up and also useful, good subject for a hub. Information about issues like this needs to be shared, I hope it gets read by lots of people.
Hello, I would like to thank you for posting this information. When I first saw this about a yr ago I was sick to my stomach. I am currently writing a paper on this for my College English class. Do you know if there has been an atempt to figure out if there is a way to get this garbage patch cleaned up? I realized that even if we could clean up the bigger trash that the area could never be totally clean because some of it it so small.
thats is so bad many people do that and the amount of people that do recycle is 10% maybe even less that is just sad how people can live their lives chucking their rubbish out the window.
I am really appericiate your post, this would really provide the great information .Thanks for sharing.
Regards
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tony0724 2 years ago
Bard I was well aware of this , and It just makes me sick to my stomach ! Thx for posting this and I hope people do all they can to do their part . We really need to find an alternative to plastic .