Well I suppose fish might try and eat it but that's the only problem I
can think of.  They'd probably spit it out anyway.  I don't think it
breaks down to anything particularly harmful.

2008/12/12 [email protected] <[email protected]>:
>
> A question comes to mind here.
> If polystyrene or other material were harmful to marine life, would
> that not be counter productive? Perhaps further investigation into
> this idea may produce somethig safe and effective.
> Keep the ideas coming.
> Steven Parkes
>
> On Dec 3, 1:15 pm, "Andrew Lockley" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> If you dropped loads of tiny expanded polystyrene beads into the sea,
>> these would reflect sunlight.  In the Arctic they could also act like
>> a 'raft' for snow to build up on. They could be made on big ships that
>> dropped them into the sea at points where they were unlikely to be
>> blown away, and could float around for many years in the open ocean
>> before bio-degrading and/or sinking to the bottom of the sea.
>>
>> An alternative method would be to pour an oily liquid into the oceans
>> that reflects sunlight.  It would have to be gas-permeable to allow
>> oxygen through.  I do not know of such a liquid.
>
> >
>

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