The very thing that makes plastic items useful to consumers, their durability and stability, also makes them a problem in marine environments. Around 100 million tonnes of plastic are produced each year of which about 10 percent ends up in the sea. About 20 percent of this is from ships and platforms, the rest from land.
Take a walk along any beach anywhere in the world and washed ashore
will be many polythene plastic bags, bottles and containers, plastic
drums, expanded polystyrene packing, polyurethane foam pieces, pieces
of polypropylene fishing net and discarded lengths of rope. Together with traffic cones, disposable lighters, vehicle tyres and
toothbrushes, these items have been casually thrown away on land and at
sea and have been carried ashore by wind and tide.
These larger items are the visible signs of a much larger problem.
These big items do not degrade like natural materials. At sea and on
shore under the influence of sunlight, wave action and mechanical
abrasion they simply break down slowly into ever smaller
particles.
A single one litre drinks bottle could break down into enough small
fragments to put one on every mile of beach in the entire world. These
smaller particles are joined by the small pellets of plastic which are
the form in which many new plastics are marketed and which can be lost
at sea by the drumload or even a whole container load. These
modern day “marine tumbleweeds” have been thrown into sharp focus, not
only by the huge quantities removed from beaches by dedicated
volunteers, but by the fact that they have been found to accumulate in
sea areas where winds and currents are weak.
The “Eastern Garbage Patch”
The North Pacific sub-tropical gyre covers a large area of the Pacific
in which the water circulates clockwise in a slow spiral. Winds are
light. The currents tend to force any floating material into the low
energy central area of the gyre. There are few islands on which the
floating material can beach. So it stays there in the gyre, in
astounding quantities estimated at six kilos of plastic for every kilo
of naturally occurring plankton. The equivalent of an area the
size of Texas swirling slowly around like a clock. This gyre has also
been dubbed “the Asian Trash Trail” the “Trash Vortex” or the “Eastern
Garbage Patch”.
This perhaps wouldn’t be too much of a problem if the plastic had no
ill effects. The larger items, however, are consumed by seabirds and
other animals which mistake them for prey. Many seabirds and their
chicks have been found dead, their stomachs filled with medium sized
plastic items such as bottle tops, lighters and balloons. A turtle
found dead in Hawaii had over a thousand pieces of plastic in its
stomach and intestines. It has
been estimated that over a million
sea-birds and one hundred thousand marine mammals and sea turtles are
killed each year by ingestion of plastics or entanglement.
Animals can become entangled in discarded netting and line. Even tiny
jelly-fish like creatures become entangled in lengths of plastic
filament, or eat the small plastic particles floating in the water.
Chemical sponge
There is a sinister twist to all this as well. The plastics can act as
a sort of “chemical sponge”. They can concentrate many of the most
damaging of the pollutants found in the worlds oceans: the persistent
organic pollutants (POPs). So any animal eating these pieces of
plastic debris will also be taking in highly toxic pollutants.
The North Pacific gyre is one of five major ocean gyres and it is
possible that this Trash Vortex problem is one which is present in
other oceans as well. The Sargasso Sea is a well known slow circulation
area in the Atlantic, and research there has also demonstrated high
concentrations of plastic particles present in the water.
Ocean hitchhikers
The floating plastics can also affect marine ecosystems in a surprising
way, by providing a ready surface for organisms to live on. These
plants and animals can then be transported on the plastic far outside
their normal habitat. These ocean hitch-hikers can then invade new
habitats to become possible nuisance species.
Of course, not all plastic floats. In fact around 70 percent of discarded
plastic sinks to the bottom. In the North Sea, Dutch scientists have
counted around 110 pieces of litter for every square kilometre of the
seabed, a staggering 600,000 tonnes in the North Sea alone. These
plastics can smother the sea bottom and kill the marine life which is
found there.
The issue of plastic debris is one that needs to be urgently addressed.
At the personal level we can all contribute by avoiding plastics in the
things we buy and by disposing of our waste responsibly. Obviously
though, there is a need to make ship owners and operators, offshore
platforms and fishing boat operators more aware of the
consequences of irresponsible disposal of plastic items.