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The plastic found in a single turtle's stomach

Hundreds of shards reveal the threat to wildlife from debris floating in our seas

By Adam Sherwin

The debris from the stomach of a green sea turtle

The debris from the stomach of a green sea turtle

This collection of hundreds of coloured, jagged shards could be a work of abstract art. But the objects in the photograph to the right are the contents of the stomach of a sea turtle that lost its battle with plastic pollution.

Environmentalists examined the stomach of the juvenile turtle found off the coast of Argentina. The bellyful of debris that they found is symptomatic of the increasing threat to the sea turtles from a human addiction to plastic.

Sea turtles often mistake plastic items for jellyfish or other food. Ingesting non-biodegradable ocean pollution can cause a digestive blockage and internal lacerations. The result can be debilitation, followed by death.

Humans currently produce 260 million tons of plastic a year. When those products are pulled into the sea's currents, the plastics do not biodegrade but are broken into smaller pieces which are consumed by marine life at the bottom of the food chain. An examination of gastrointestinal obstruction in a green turtle found off Florida discovered that, over the course of a month, the animal's faeces had contained 74 foreign objects, including "four types of latex balloons, different types of hard plastic, a piece of carpet-like material and two 2-4mm tar balls."

The biggest rubbish "swill" is the North Pacific Gyre, known as the "great garbage patch", which is the size of Texas and contains an estimated 3.5 million items of detritus, ranging from toys to toothbrushes.

"The oceans have become one giant refuse bin for all manner of plastics. All sea turtle species are particularly prone and may be seriously harmed," according to the biologists Colette Wabnitz, from the University of British Columbia, and Wallace Nichols, of the California Academy of Sciences. In "Plastic Pollution: An Ocean Emergency", they write: "Continued research on the impacts of plastic on the ocean environment and human health is likely to conclude the problem is worse than currently understood.

"The symptom of this growing crisis can be seen inside and on sea turtles as well as their oceanic and terrestrial habitats. Bold initiatives that directly confront the source of plastic pollution, redesign packaging and rethink the very idea of 'throwaway culture' are urgently required."

Almost all marine species, from plankton to whales, have ingested plastic. But, even in small quantities, plastic can kill sea turtles due to obstruction of the oesophagus or perforation of the bowel, the biologists said.

Fifty out of 92 turtles found dead, stranded on the shorelines of Rio Grande do Sul state in Brazil, had ingested a "considerable amount of man-made debris".

Because young sea turtles indiscriminately feed on pelagic material, "high occurrences of plastic are common in the digestive tract of these small sea turtles," the biologists write.

They are asking visitors to help reduce the threat from plastics during visits to coastal areas by bringing their own reusable bags and food containers, and avoiding plastic-bottled drinks.

  • heavensent3
    you seem like a very conscious being; I know I am. That is the best hope for the planet; that people can link in conscious thought and awareness; it will change things.
  • sssaam123
    I agree with you. My comment wasn't literal it was to emphasis the magnitude of what you suggest, a complete stop on plastic. I also agree we are the cause and therefore are responsible, as individuals and nations. I used to work in a Cinema during college. After screenings we'd clear all the cups and popcorn boxes; hundreds sometimes, thousands of cardboard and plastic items on a daily basis. That was ONE cinema. The question is: is a consumer responsible for the correct disposal of their rubbish or the business? I believe the two need to work together. Therefore their public need to care.
  • HairyScot
    haha - indeed
  • I think that on average each Eco warrior converts two otherwise don't cares into ones who are totally fed up with their sanctimonious preaching and thinks to hell with it all. As long as the Ecos are costing us a 40% hike in our fuel bills for ill thought out renewable energy policies anything with an Eco label is something to be resisted not supported. Especially true in view of their favoured remedy of taxation rather than constructive suggestions.
  • No the targets on climate change are not met because the science is believed by the majority, and quite rightly, to be so sub standard as to be a very sick joke. The science is so bad they had to abuse the legal rights of others under the FOI to avoid the source data getting into the public domain totally successfully. AGW is based on bad data acquisition followed by worse analysis and supposedly justified by computer models that any professional outside climate science would rate a total junk at best. You cannot care about what you cannot sensibly believe in.
  • captainj84
    yes and those bins are known as bathgate, livingston, coatbridge, easterhouse, bailleston and many many more!
  • There is no reason to be anything but derogatory as long as their approach does a hundred times more harm than it does good. The blind belief in AGW has resulted in a fortune spent on measures that supposedly do no harm but in reality block measures in every direction that will result in huge real environmental gains. I have nothing against caring I have everything against a group with a woefully inadequate technological ability then calling the shots in the most inept way possible as is done with every single policy with an eco label. The road to hell is paved with their intentions but we have to live with that road while they make a fortune out of the measures and do not.
  • UniversityHype
    I'm sure as the consumer world becomes filled with more eco-warriors like yourselves that companies will become forced into selling more ecologically friendly products. Including less-packaging. However, until one company starts doing it, and seeing a result, there will be no such change. Feed the revolution and boycott plastic!
  • Whenever I shop at the Cooperative they always ask me if i need a bag or have my own and give a certain look :) not negative or judgemental but quite serious which makes me feel guilty and invariably use less bags than would have been comfortable I will be bringing my own from now on :) FYI watch this short film (youtube) with Edward Norton on the subject "Plastic Plague" ... perhaps plastic has other more worrying consequences!
  • UniversityHype
    It seems that human-kind can do no right at the moment. I feel we have been going down the wrong path for too long now, and although a turn-around is needed, it may sadly be too late.
  • captainj84
    i bought a small pair of nail clippers today, they are about 2" the solid plastic packaging size was 4" wide and 6" tall. I only took notice of the size when opening and thought, what a total waste, not only that but surely the company in question would benefit from say a simple small cardboard wrapper or something similar. Kids toys are the biggest offenders. Why cant the government come up with some kind of incentive for companies to use bio-degradable/less packaging. I personally would buy a product with no packaging than one that fills your recycling bin in one go!
  • HairyScot
    not in all cities, Edinburgh and Glasgow have bins all over.
  • HairyScot
    how is it I have no problems agreeing on the bombing. Cameron has a taste for it now.
  • heavensent3
    I don't agree with you; the basis of life is exchange of goods - we need to eat and we need to make money. We can do all this without plastic packaging. Everything we use for packaging should be bio-degradable. Hard plastic as with toothbrushes, bottles and all kinds of things - can't we be innovative to use another material? It ends up in the sea because people DUMP into the sea - WHY? If human beings have no respect for the earth then the earth will end up showing us the fruits of our actions and it will be a barren wasteland. The tsunami in Japan showed the force of nature taking all our goods and shredding them to shards and leaving devastation. We do that to the planet daily in our actions. Imagine the seas of weaponry and bombs and tanks littering the deserts of Iraq and Afghanistan and now Libya. This litter of the human mind is what we see. Stopping buying is the least of our problems.
  • lettus
    Bonobo says: "Bullshit. I do not have an addiction to plastic - neither do humans. Companies do. Why? Because it is cheap. Change that and you change how things are packaged." A tax on the use of plastic could change that. For example, companies could be taxed on the amount of plastic they sell each year. A per item tax would probably be simplest. Say 5p per item. 5p per tub of margarine, 5p per yoghurt pot, 5p per bottle of water or other drink. It's probably a bit too much to hope that such a tax could be used to fund a campaign to clean up plastics from the environment, but at least it would radically affect companies' calculations about what to use for their packaging. It would probably mean that prices would go up by a few pence, but at least it would be going some way towards trying to protect the planet and its wildlife for future generations. Plastic containers are bad for us, too. The toxins in plastic do migrate to some extent into their contents, even if it's only bottled water. Glass is the most healthy container. If there was a big switch from plastics to glass then it could lead to new glass recycling companies being set up, and new jobs.
  • Steveal
    Excellent! Breed more turtles - clean up the oceans. Simple really.
  • Mladich
    I once had the utter pleasure of sailing alongside a wonderful turtle in the Atlantic. He was only doing about a knot, and we slowed to watch him (from a respectful distance). Wonderful memory. As per, we Humans have killed another innocent with our arrogance and selfishness.
  • paracetamol
    yea, it has to make money for the people collecting it. i think the pirates will be the next bombing campaign
  • Midwinter1947
    True.
  • Midwinter1947
    An extreme example, I know, but one which illustrates how huge quantities of waste get in to the sea all at once, is provided by video footage of the Japanese Tsunami. It doesn't have to be on such a scale, however, high tides and storms do much the same thing. Even on calm days, the litter that people leave on the beaches (everything from used condoms to fishing gear) or dump into the harbour is relentlessly carried out by at least 2 tides per day. Plus, of course, every river estuary carries rubbish out to sea - often from far inland.
  • HairyScot
    Personally, the thing I see out walking all over Scotland, plastic water bottles - these should be banned, people would just go back to water from the tap as they always used to. There is another downside on plastic packaging for food, they are known to cause problems when they do breakdown, chemicals that are similar to hormones.
  • sssaam123
    Stop buying ANY food, clothes, devices, and so on then. WE push the demand up by contributing through buying, buying and buying. Plastic cannot be stopped, but reduced.
  • HairyScot
    Well the US is going to be the biggest contributor. Would it not be a great way of getting the pirates off the sea's by getting them to fish for this, pay them so much a ton? I know "rubbish" idea!
  • Yawn. it is obvious that you are not an indigenous Brit and that you live in a city. Unfortunately all of the litter bins were removed as a result of the IRA bombing campaign in the late 1980's. This and the massive cultural changes in the last 20 years are the culprit. The situation outside of the bigger metropolitan areas is much better
  • Crydda
    OK! so a bit of a non starter then. Thanks for the information.
  • heavensent3
    THIS IS A TOTAL CRIME What in the hell are these governments doing about it This should be the Number 1 priority besides getting food and water to everyone on the planet and sanitation and roads and hospitals and schools. Plastic packaging has to be STOPPED> Instead of these vile governments spending so much time on war and bombs and hatred, we should be using every aspect of our resources and technological power to clean up the ocean and get rid of this plastic 'country' that will end up killing the oceans and fish and animals. THIS is CRUCIAL now, more important than killing.
  • patrickgage
    The plastic in the sea comes from the land not from shipping. In 1990 I worked for the International Maritime Organization (IMO) and while there conducted a postal survey querying some four hundred people in twenty eight Caribbean countries. The response was interesting. The majority noted that plastic, and other waste, in their island and coastal countries, was routinely deposited in dry river beds. Came the rains and it was washed to the sea. Senior managers of cruise companies told me of the recycling plants on board their vessels and noted that it would harm their reputations immeasurably if one plastic cup or cocktail napkin with their logo on it were to be found in the sea. Fyffes, who run banana boats to the Caribbean, told me they have skips on board for waste and they are emptied in the UK on their return. But the growers of bananas routinely discard plastic bags, large and blue just like a jelly fish, into rivers where they find their way to the sea. The majority of waste in the sea comes from the land, not from shipping.
  • What like plastic bags? That worked out well did it not? No that is not the alternative. The way to reduce this and even perhaps clean up, is to start in the countries that make the most mess. Here in Nigeria you would not believe the levels of trash and waste that gets poured out into the sea, everyday. I go kayaking here and after a heavy rainstorm, there is just tonnes of it floating out to the ocean. The UK in comparison to the rest of the world does an excellent job with recycling and trash management. Taxing us further does not make any sense. The rubbish is already out there. Reward / incentive has to be in the clean up / disposal of the plastics. A good start would be for Companies to be forced by law to only use recyclable plastics for packaging of consumer goods. Then there should be an incentive for the consumer to place the discarded items somewhere where it can be managed responsibly. This is not so much of an issue in the UK and most 1st world / Western countries, like I said, but in Africa and other developing countries in the world, it is simply considered normal to throw stuff on the ground once finished with. I would take the bet that if every person in Nigeria received a few minutes of airtime every time they disposed of a recyclable item at a dedicated recycling centre, then there would not be one piece of trash lying around...
  • Snotster, I use my backpack on most occasions instead of plastic bags - I have done so all my life - before it was trendy even - but guess what - my efforts have been futile This is what I realise: Real and effective change happens from the top down. If we (that's you and me) make the decision limit our use of plastic bags - nothing happens. If the Government (any hue) makes the decision to limit the use of plastic - something happens.
  • I am sure that you will be pleased to hear that about 90% of the marijuana plants that the US do destroy in their highly sucessful war on drugs is not the 'drug' variety and could be used for the production of the very healthy hemp oil or hemp cloth products. ;-)
  • Jon8
    The biodegradable plastic revolution hit a snag. It only degrades when left in direct sunlight, which means it doesn't at all, because most of it gets buried. It also caused problems if it was mixed in with ordinary plastic at recycling facilities because it couldn't be recycled in the same way. Bit of a showstopper unfortunately. You can get cornstarch bags which rot away much faster, but they're not very strong and start rotting too quickly to be used as shopping bags. On your "day of rage" idea, I'm sure that Tesco has or had a note on some of their literature that said they'd be "happy" to recycle packaging from all of their products if customers return it to their stores. I've yet to see anywhere in their stores signed as a place to dump said packaging. Perhaps the checkout would be the best place.
  • snotcricket
    But it is the individuals who create the floating seas of rubbish & I doubt it is possible to police the high seas. Perhaps the ships should be able to store pro rata the rubbish to the stock they take on board. The environmental lobby sometimes is its own worst enemy with food to be 'safely' packaged in upto three containers before carried in a plastic bag etc - but it is 'us' that are the problem. I walk quite a bit & cannot believe the crap people leave behind, they obviously had the wherewithal to transport the goods in the packet. And yet haven't the room to bring the crap back & place in the bin they actually pay rates for the privilege to do so, its pretty maddening. In a sense it is part of legislation in terms of education, but I do feel we should to some extent write the problem off & begin with that education from the very first day at school. Make it a major part of future awareness, you never know the children may well teach the adults to the error of the ways. Of course we could stop buying so much crap & also look at packaging etc, both in its necessity & formulation.
  • waterbase
    So sad.
  • She's a Delia lady. This must be where it all goes wrong. I now need a colonic irrigation - just like the poor turtle.
  • Russtybee
    Yes bend over, I will stop pushing when it gets to the tide mark.
  • Here is the other issue - There are 60 million people in the UK and mostly, people put their rubbish in bins and a large number now divide their rubbish to make the recycling process easier. This is all very well and good. BUT... Here in Nigeria - people toss bags, bottles, containers, boxes all onto the ground which all eventually gets washed out to the sea - with absolute disregard. It seems shocking to us, but to them - it is normal. There are 150 million people here alone. Now ddd the vast majority of Africa. Now add developing regions such India, Asia and South America and you have a lot of crap being tossed into the sea. To me, I see the only solution to the issue is making recycling a real financial opportunity for everyone. It should be worth your while financially to hold onto your plastic container until you can dispose of it in a way that gives you value. I personally believe that if everyone on the planet were given a few minutes of airtime everytime they took something to a recycling point, there would not be a single piece of shit lying anywhere....
  • JaitcH
    Is it not possible to add a 'flavour' that would made this stuff distasteful to animals so they would be persuaded not to ingest it? When I decline bags I am often told they are for 'security' to prove I paid for the item. I tell the cashier to just give me the receipt and if she has no tape, to affix the receipt to the item, I find a glare usually fixes audacious security types.
  • lostdog3
    That's where my ruler went. Can I have it back please Mr Turtle?
  • sssaam123
    WE NEED MORE LOCAL MARKETS! Little waste, much economical juice.
  • google-813f15f363b5da2edf4fe190f3a83be7
    http://www.facebook.com/hemplogic?ref=ts We managed to survive using hemp for at least 5000 years, it was only america and it's ridiculous non democratic war on drugs that made plastic viable in the 1st place. We don't need oil, we don't need plastics, both could be replaced if we allowed the production of industrial hemp, not only would it help by getting plastics out of our food chain but also absorbing carbon as it grows, we need intelligent government to manage our planets resources for the good of our planet and its inhabitants.
  • Crydda
    But, incurring extra costs, just, might make them think about reducing waste. I agree we have an enormous problem with plastic. Of course, it's a wonderfully useful substance, with thousands of variants and positive benefits, but it's our carelessness with it that's causing the problems. What happened to biodegradable plastic, which caused a bit of a buzz a few years ago? I haven't heard anything about it, recently. Personally, I can't understand why the UK doesn't slap a compulsory charge on all plastic bags.
  • paracetamol
    yes, snot, i agree with what you have posted, especially about the education. you are looking at what leads up to the problem, and im shocked at how big the problem has become, and am asking what can we do about these oceans of floating trash? we are in agreement. the individuals have to start caring, and the mountains of rubbish have to be tackled... i still cant believe how bad its become, while the nations have turned a blind eye to it all. our whole sea will be a dump if we dont get it together. its already colossal. it will take every country in the world.......years to work on it.
  • No they'd clearly just dump it into the seas and oceans like the rest of us do... Everyone should go watch the documentary "Addicted to Plastic" from 2009 it is very interesting and shows just how pervasive plastics have become, the problem with recycling them but also offers solutions and work arounds.
  • Crydda
    I have an idea. Would it be possible to have a, sort of, "day of rage" over wasteful plastic packaging? If every shopper in the UK (or better still, all of Europe) on a specified day, removed and discarded all unnecessary plastic from their purchases at the checkout, instead of carting it home; retailers would have a hell-of-a-pile of garbage to dispose of and then, maybe, they'd have a chat to their suppliers.
  • paracetamol
    yea, itd be good if there was more advertising the fact that plastics bad for us....
  • There was an article in this paper a few days ago about how Fyffes, I think, are about to start individually shrink-wrapping bananas. When we get to individually shrink-wrapping peas I'm leavin'.
  • yawn
    I mean I'm not originally from UK but I live in England now, this is where the rubbish problem is. Not that it is only a problem of the UK. A few weeks ago my city was rated one of the top cleanest city streets, I was gobsmacked. I would hate to see the ones listed at the bottom.
  • paracetamol
    so what do we do, snot? individuals cant go and mop up floating seas of rubbish from hawaii to japan... how do we get it going? doesnt it have to be governments?
  • paracetamol
    you didnt say what country....?
  • paracetamol
    bonobo, hi! recyclable plastics is good interim idea, and the phasing out of all other plastics. itd have to be enforced worldwide. and incentives for the consumer to dispose responsibly is good too. in britain, theres fines for dropping litter, but it isnt properly enforced, and ive noticed that schoolchildren think its cool to trash the streets, and go out of their way to do that. so it needs education too, with films of the devastated seas. thats horrible that you go kayaking, andtonnes of trash is floating in the sea. its mind boggling thats theres areas of floating rubbish in the seas, equivalent size to U S. how have we let it go like this? why have we done nothing? it has to be tackled....
  • snotcricket
    If your wife paid more attention to Jamie's show she would notice he usually removes (on camera) the Sainsbury plastic wrappers/containers before cooking the contents, mind I think the mock turtle soup was a tad insensitive.
  • king_of_central_europe
    Not only in the ocean ... : The average duck on the pond will be killed by ingestion of cigarette-filters ... eg. ...
  • yawn
    Sorry, I'm not native to the UK but there is a horrific rubbish problem here. I always see bottles, computers, chairs, styrofoam, bags, containers, etc. floating in the lake in my city. Not to mention loads of people throwing trash on the ground. One of the first thing I noticed when I came here was a lack of dustbins in public, if you go to a city like Paris they are bins everywhere and they are emptied often. This is a start, but we need to change the way we consume. It's nearly impossible to find reusable bottles here and the people in my building have loaded the recycling bins with rubbish so that nothing gets recycled anymore. It's an embarrassment, to say the least.
  • snotcricket
    Now just a cotton picking minute - this is not the fault of the Coalition or previous admin's, quite ridiculous. Take some responsibility cookie, it is we who purchase/consume most of the crap ensconsed within these containers & it is we who cast the containers aside without care for ourselves, other living creatures or the environment in general. Look no further than your local supermarket/convenience store/fast food outlets & the queues that form at the checkouts & you find the true culprits - for once we cannot get away with blaming any political hue, it's us, you see cookie, we 'must have', why? I'm not sure, but we 'must have'.
  • let look the treat in face, humans buy cheap useless stuff disguised in plastic packaging, humans are full of toxic waste stuff that make poison food taste good to sell at top prices, so its a journey to extinction, place yoiur bet and the cockroach collects, the pillors of capitalism last species collects.
  • headtheball
    Plastic madness. Bring back hemp products.
  • Glass containers: save the environment. save humans. create jobs. Why does the 'green' Government not act now?
  • I'm not so sure. My wife cooks stuff that resembles plastic.
  • we could tell companys to use more expensive packaging. But they dont care as long as they make money. Look at trying to stop climate change. All the targets are never met. Y? Because people care about money more than enviroment. People are selfish and just living for today and not worrying about the future. Untill the enviroments really impacts on people so that civilisation is at major risk, only then would people change but right now we are getting by so lets carry on making as much profit as we can because that all i care about.
  • It looks like Tony Cragg's Britain Seen from the North.
  • Boanerges9
    "The plastic found in a single turtle's stomach". Ah yes, but that might not be the case were the turtle married!
  • same here in se asia, locals dump garbage, or casually throw waste into storm drains, and rivers, garbage has been known to be buried on beeches, and whole pontoons of hotel and resort garbage float off islands, because its's cheaper than using organised waste services.
  • It's not so much plastic's intrinsic nastiness, albeit a by-product of oil, that's the problem. It's the all pervasive way that it spreads throughout the environment and persists that does the real damage. The problem with recycling plastic is that there are so many different types, which are often combined in a single item. These first have to be separated before they can be recycled. Even the Danish, who have quite an advanced plastic recycling system, admit that this is a major problem that adds considerably to the cost. But first we have to get people to stop throwing it away. An incentive scheme, as they have in some continental countries, whereby you actually get paid for recycling would help.
  • Gloops
    Is there REALLY a need to shrink-wrap cucumbers? Why have Sun-pat started putting peanut butter in plastic jars instead of glass? Why do supermarkets give away plastic bags instead of paper bags? Why do the paper CD wallets I just bought come in a plastic box?
  • Run4demHills
    Gosh! I didn't realise one had to clean them out so carefully before serving them up in the Palace of Westminster.
  • Please share this link all over the internet in order to promote awareness and stop/reduce this menace. If people know, it'll give em chance to change.
  • Midwinter1947
    Plastic is a marvelous material and the very best material for many applications. However, it suffers from a bad reputation which it acquired when it was used mainly as a substitute for other more expensive materials - leather, wood and so on. Essentially, this is a persistent problem of perception. It is up to us; we really should regard it as every bit as precious as any other material and not throw it away so easily - especially as much of it is now recyclable.
  • is this true? this is terrible - that is a huge area to cover with rubbish. where can i read up on it? whoops - just found it http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/the-worlds-rubbish-dump-a-garbage-tip-that-stretches-from-hawaii-to-japan-778016.html
  • loads of info on British sourced plastic free products, world wide anti-plastic campaigns and other plastic refusniks can be found at plasticisrubbish - plus some very scary photos of plastic pollution- you can reach it through me
  • nutleyboy
    I see the future........ super plastic mutant turtles.........oh yes
  • jackfruit
    Shocking.
  • Bullshit. I do not have an addiction to plastic - neither do humans. Companies do. Why? Because it is cheap. Change that and you change how things are packaged.
  • activesail
    I often see plastic rubbish way out to sea nowadays. It demonstrates how bad plastic pollution really is when a hundred miles out in the Atlantic, everyday rubbish floats by.
  • Ironspider
    I'm sure this says something about humanity as a species. We can always claim ignorance on the part of our forebears who knew no better, but from our modern perspective we can't ignore the impact of our actions. I recycle as much material as I can, be it plastic, glass or paper, but the onslaught of unnecessary packaging is relentless. We're also faced with so much choice that we voluntarily throw things away even when we don't need to. I can remember travelling to France by ferry and being surprised at seeing a lone bottle floating in the Channel and wondering how it got there. Shortly afterward I read an article about the mass, floating rubbish dumps trapped in the gyres in the Atlantic and Pacific. Then I stopped wondering how and started thinking 'Why?'
  • milesbatch
    Look, I'm sorry. I am just as disgusted about it as the rest of the people on this page. Eventually we will wipe ourselves out and take everything else with us.
  • paracetamol
    if we love our world, theres hope...
  • paracetamol
    hi miles! maybe we could use you in the clean up... you strange person, you!
  • paracetamol
    thanks pam... i was thinking that its good not to just gather together the same minded people, but to get 'out', as it were into the media, so that ordinary people who didnt know about the rubbish seas, can find out... like i did today.
  • paracetamol
    yukkk!
  • paracetamol
    peter, peter plastic eater... i ll send you one, if we can dump the plastic rubbish at your door....
  • paracetamol
    im really annoyed that theres no comment section after the article about the sea of waste stretching from japan to hawaii. why? im shocked after reading about it. a man sailed for a whole week through it, it was so vast.! it cant go on. what are we to do about it?
  • And789
    'Eco nuts'? Why so derogatory about people who care for the environment? Surely caring about the planet on which we live is a good thing, not a bad thing. What sort of person doesn't care?
  • milesbatch
    I was wondering where my ruler had gone! Swallowed it whole!
  • Whenever I dig over my garden, nearly every spade dug has little tiny plastic bits. The hedges always have a pop cola bottle, a crisp packet or two stuck deep in its branches. Down every city street, up every country lane, walking in the woods and even rambling up to the top of Snowdon this 'fruit' of human progress is everywhere. Not only are the seas and the poor turtles contaminated but so is England's green and pleasant land. Plastic is a major contaminant of our planet and much more needs to be done to get rid of this awful stuff some time soon.
  • GoodLuck2
    Its our fault lets have a plastic tax.
  • paracetamol
    im sure that tsunamis also add to the sea of waste...i hope that doesnt sound heedless, i didnt mean it so. it isnt enough just for individuals to be careful about the disposal of waste.. it needs to be cleared up, maybe by an international group? it has to be dealt with, or the whole ocean will end up the same. i dont think that we need research to see that.
  • trelawney08
    We are a rotten species. Agree with calls for something to be done about the plastic 'continents' circling the seas. Unfortunately with a world population quite content to sh*t where it eats there are only two hopes, and one of them's Bob.
  • Once the AGW rubbish is put under open investigation and consigned to the garbage heap of bad science along with flat earth and phlogiston this will be rapidly addressed as it can be burned in plasma furnaces so it will be economic to harvest the plastic soup in the centre of the current circulation of the major oceans of the world.
  • kawasakiman
    Plastic exists because big businesses make better profits from using it, instead of the alternatives. The blame game should start there, not with consumers who seem to be blamed for everything.
  • paracetamol
    isnt this another one that goes back to pollution of our planet by the oil industry? if there are floating islands of rubbish, then they are scoop upable. we just need more attention to the fact in the media. more people who are willing to show that they care, for eventually action to be taken.
  • Affinite
    Not fair to point a finger at the sailing community. In general us Yachties are amongst the most eco responsible people you will come across. (By definition we prefer to harness wind power rather than burning fossil fuel for our recreation). Waste dumped overboard is usually biodegradable food waste with plastics being stored and disposed of responsibly on land. Worst I've seen is on some of the Greek Islands where the islands waste tip is simply a ravine down to the sea.
  • this is why I boycott plastic - it kills animals Fcuks the environment. You can live plastic free - well almost.
  • colibri1
    And this leads to the question of how all this plastic is affecting filter-feeders like baleen whales.
  • Tribeless
    Frighteningly so.
  • Deucleciano
    What chance do these ceatures stand against our worldwide onslaught against the environment?
  • vinpop
    the yacthing world has alot to answer for,for example if you are crossing the pacific on a nice jolly,where do think the rubbish goes ? straight over board ! yes thats right.
  • Where can I buy a plastic duck island for the moat I've just had cleaned?
  • Why do Eco nuts always regard a tax as a solution to everything? Are they really as retarded as all that? While the answer appears to be yes with little question surely there must be a few out there with some practical sense to advocate realistic measures to make it easier instead of always thinking in terms of the stick. We get about a cubic metre of plastic trays a month for the simple reason that they do not stack. Why when we can have standard sizes for paper can we not have standard sizes and shapes for packaging trays so they stack? If they were in A3 A4 A5 shallow and deep modules recycling them would not be a minute fraction of the problem it is currently.
  • environment: (n) a nice big space to dump crap in. We really need to rewrite that definition, sometime soon.
  • paracetamol
    hi goodluck! what good would that do? the government would pocket the money
  • altthought
    How does plastic waste get into the sea, does shipping routinely discard its rubbish overboard?.
  • yujiayao
    For those of you who are purchasing Faucets,we realize that this is one of the most important purchasing decisions you will make. You have made the best choice in choosing one of our Bathroom Sink Faucets,Kitchen Faucets or Shower Faucets, as they are constructed of the highest grade materials to ensure that your new Faucets lasts forever. You can be confident in your purchase as each item comes with a no hassle 30 day return privilege.
  • murrawo
    death by plastic? we are a very imaginative species....

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