Dear Friends/Co-sailors,
After having shared the news about the NASA satellite that will track the whereabouts of the lost carbon, sharing this latest news about a study report that brings to the fore how dangerously we have polluted our seas.
As the rt.com news points out, "the total amount of plastic in the open-ocean surface is estimated at between 7,000 and 35,000 tons, according to the report". So, we are having plastic seas all around!
I hope you will find this information useful.
Thanks and regards,
Ranjan
88% of world’s oceans covered by plastic junk – study
Entrepreneur and conservationist who lives in Hong Kong,
displays rubbish on a beach on the south side of Hong Kong which has been left
uncleaned (AFP Photo / Mike Clarke)
At least 88 percent of the surface of the world’s open
oceans is polluted by plastic debris, says a new scientific report. The
findings raise large concerns of the safety of marine life and how this ocean
litter may affect food chains.
"Those little pieces of plastic, known as
microplastics, can last hundreds of years and were detected in 88 percent of
the ocean surface sampled during the Malaspina Expedition 2010," lead
researcher and the author of the study Andres Cozar from the University of
Cadiz, told AFP.
The results of the study “Plastic debris in the open ocean”
are based on 3,070 total ocean samples collected around the world by Spain’s
Malaspina science expedition in 2010. They have been recently published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), an official journal of
the US National Academy of Sciences (NAS).
The total amount of plastic in the open-ocean surface is
estimated at between 7,000 and 35,000 tons, according to the report. This
amount, though big, is lower than the scientists expected.
Screenshot from “Plastic debris in the open ocean” report
According to the study, the highest amount of plastic is to
be found in the North Pacific Ocean – 12.4 kilotons (at the high estimate),
which is almost twice as high as in the North Atlantic Ocean (6.7 kilotons).
The clearest open ocean is considered to be the Indian Ocean, at 5.1 kilotons.
The authors say that it could be related to the high human
population on the eastern coast of the Asian continent, which is the most
densely populated coast in the world.
“The surface plastic concentrations measured in the Kuroshio
Current, the western arm of the North Pacific Gyre, can become exceptionally
high, including the highest reported for non-accumulation regions,” the
document says.
The report also figured out five major concentrations of
ocean ‘plastic junk.’ They are located west of the US (the Pacific Ocean),
between the US and Africa (the Atlantic Ocean), west of southern South America
(the Pacific Ocean) and east and west of the southern Africa (the Atlantic and
the Indian Oceans).
However, the study raised several new concerns including
those about the fate of so much plastic, particularly the smallest pieces. The
research found that plastic fragments "between a few microns and a few
milimeters in size are underrepresented in the ocean surface samples."
Screenshot from “Plastic debris in the open ocean” report
"Ocean currents carry plastic objects which split into
smaller and smaller fragments due to solar radiation," says Cozar.
"These micro plastics have an influence on the behavior and the food chain
of marine organisms."
Cozar added that most of the impacts taking place due to
plastic pollution in the oceans “are not yet known."
According to Kara Lavender Law, from the Sea Education
Association in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the research provides the first
global estimate she knows of for floating plastic junk.
"We are putting, certainly by any estimate, a large
amount of a synthetic material into a natural environment," Law said.
"We're fundamentally changing the composition of the ocean."
However, the impact on fish and birds is yet to be studied,
including how the marine life and birds may be harmed if they swallow the
plastic, she added.
Source: http://rt.com/news/169564-ocean-surface-covered-plastic/
No comments:
Post a Comment