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Marine Debris. By: Angelica, Carissa and Samantha. The Great Pacific. Garbage Patch. http://becausewater.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/pacific-garbage-patch12.jpg. What is the. Pacific Garbage Patch?. Gyre of marine debris Definition of marine debris:
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Marine Debris By: Angelica, Carissa and Samantha
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch http://becausewater.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/pacific-garbage-patch12.jpg
What is the Pacific Garbage Patch? • Gyre of marine debris • Definition of marine debris: • Man made garbage that has been accidentally or deliberately littered into a body of water • Common misconception, not just a few pieces of trash • One of the leading causes of pollution in our oceans6 • Source of these debris? • Estimated 20% ocean sources • 80% land sources7 • These can include: • Waste from ships/ fishing vessels • Sewage related • Litter at beaches/coastlines5 Page 6 http://www.cookiesound.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/garbage-in-ocean.jpg
Where is it Located?4 • North Pacific Gyre • The “convergence zone” • 20o N and 40o S Latitude • 100-300 miles off coast of gyres center • 2 Accumulation Zones • Western Garbage Patch • Japan • Eastern Garbage Patch • Hawaii and California
How Large is the Garbage Patch • Undetermined, only estimated • Currents • Distribution and volume • 100 million tons up • Expanding 100 feet down • Not dense • Natural Disasters Effect Size • Tsunamis • Indonesia in December 2004 • Japan 2011 • Typhoons • Philippines 2013
Density Research • In 2012 researchers began looking at the effects • of the Tsunami in Japan of 2011. • Estimate of debris location from Japan’s Tsunami
Density Research Continued • 14 researchers 2600 nautical miles • from Majuro, Japan to Tokyo in 19 days • Each team member was assigned a type of item to log • This research contributed to the study of the Garbage Patch Density.2 http://www.algalita.org/uploads/2012_asia_pacific_expedition_report.pdf
Plastic Debris • Fergusson (1974) for instance, then a member of the Council of the British Plastics Federation and a Fellow of the Plastics Institute, stated that “plastics litter is a very small proportion of all litter and causes no harm to the environment except as an eyesore” • Does not biodegrade, it photodegrades • Photodegrades into small particulates
Plastic Debris (cont’d) • Constitutes for 90% of all garbage floating in the world • ~200 billion plastic produced each year and 10% ends up in the ocean • 30 million tons of plastic is produced in the U.S. annually • 70% of it sink to the ocean floor and the rest floats • Affects marine life, fishing, and tourism • In some areas plastic outweighs phytoplankton 6:1
Who is Affected? http://www.moonshineink.com/sites/default/files/styles/homepageslideshow/public/ml_java_birdplastic2.jpg
http://www.greenpeace.org/international/Global/international/planet-2/report/2007/8/plastic_ocean_report.pdfhttp://www.greenpeace.org/international/Global/international/planet-2/report/2007/8/plastic_ocean_report.pdf
Ingestion of Plastics Albatross: • Albatrosses live almost their entire lives at sea, coming to land only to nest • Adult albatrosses feed on fish, crustaceans, and squid, and often follow ships, feeding on discarded food. Parents feed their young by regurgitating previously digested food into their mouths.
Sea Turtles • Rapid Increase of plastic ingestion • Since the 1980’s amount has increased dramatically • Not all victims are discovered • Thus estimates are likely low1
Entanglement In Plastic Debris • Discarded fishing gear – “ghost nets” • Curious young seal pups & plastic loops cycle
Plastic Scrubbers • Small fragments of plastic (~0.5 mm) derived from hand cleaners, cosmetic preparations and airblast cleaning media • Studies found in New Zealand & Canada using airblasting, found polyethylene and polystyrene residues
Swirling pools of garbage we consume! • PCB’s DDT and other toxic chemicals cannot dissolve in the water but are absorbed by plastic. • One study reported over 84 pieces of plastic in the stomachs of fish samples from the garbage patch • The same toxins in the plastic are in the fish tissues. • We EAT these fish and their toxins too!!
Prevention so far… • US House of Representatives recently passed an Amendment Act to senate. • The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration must establish a program and assign the United states Coast Guard to assist. • The program must identify and determine sources of the pollution. It must reduce and prevent the marine debris. • Also determine its impacts on the marine environment and navigation safety • The program must determine and prevent land-based sources of pollution all in coordinance with non-federal entities
To prevent expansion and promote reduction of the garbage patch we must…. • Responsibility of drifting garbage must be clarified • Cooperation of all nations and determine an international policy • Raise public awareness of the problem on an international level • Encourage international organizations already in place to expand efforts as well as hold guilty parties accountable. • Promote and support Research and data collection to prove these methods work and are worth the time and money invested.
Marine Debris is important • The Pacific Garbage patch has doubled in size in a decade • Islands of Garbage are appearing all over the globe • The Pacific Garbage patch is just one of 5 large gyres that are believed to be collecting large quantities of garbage and human waste products. • We are what we eat … This is becoming a large issue affecting the oceans, wildlife, and US!
ReferencesSamantha Brown • Slides 2-7, 10, 14, 15, 18 • Blight L.K., and A.E. Burger. 1997. Occurrence of plastic particles in seabirds from the eastern North Pacific. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 34 (5): 323-325. • http://www.algalita.org/uploads/2012_asia_pacific_expedition_report.pdf page 9 • http://www.algalita.org/pdf/PLASTIC%20DEBRIS%20ENGLISH.pdf • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. "Marine Debris in the North Pacific." A Summary of Existing Information and Identification of Data Gaps (2011): 6-7. Web. http://www.epa.gov/region9/marine-debris/pdf/MarineDebris-NPacFinalAprvd.pdf • Allsopp, Michelle, Adam Walters, David Santillo, and Paul Johnston. "Green Peace." Plastic Debris in the World’s Oceans (n.d.): 5+. Web. <http://www.greenpeace.org/international/Global/international/planet-2/report/2007/8/plastic_ocean_report.pdf>. • Allsopp, Michelle, Adam Walters, David Santillo, and Paul Johnston. "Green Peace." Plastic Debris in the World’s Oceans (n.d.): 5+. Web. <http://www.greenpeace.org/international/Global/international/planet-2/report/2007/8/plastic_ocean_report.pdf>. • Gregory M.R. and P.G. Ryan. 1997. Pelagic plastics and other seaborne persistent synthetic debris: a review of Southern Hemisphere perspectives. Prepared for AB 259 (Krekorian), AB 820 (Karnette), and AB 904 (Feuer) by the Algalita Marine Research Foundation
ReferencesCarissa Vuong Slides 8, 9, 11-13, 16, 17, 19, 20 • Derraik, Jose GB. "The pollution of the marine environment by plastic debris: a review." Marine pollution bulletin 44.9 (2002): 842-852. • Silverman, Jacob. "Why is the world biggest landfill in the Pacific Ocean?" 19 September 2007. HowStuffWorks. • Barnes, David KA. "Biodiversity: invasions by marine life on plastic debris." Nature 416.6883 (2002): 808-809.
ReferencesAngelica Paulino Slides 21-24 • Kazarian, Ursula. "Islands of Garbage Continue to Grow in Pacific." Sustainable Development Law & Policy 7.1 (2006): 21. • Hoshaw, Lindsey. "Afloat in the ocean, expanding islands of trash." New York Times 9 (2009).