Waves of junk are flowing into the food chain

Source, with photos >
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/pacificnw04232006/coverstory.html

MELANIE PERRY

Normally, northern fulmars spend their whole lives way
out in the ocean, touching land only during breeding
season. Wildlife experts believe this one weakened
after feasting on floating plastic, and died when a
storm blew it onto an Ocean Park beach. Of the 59
pieces found in and around the bird's belly, all but
one were plastic.

Enlarge this photo

STEVE RINGMAN / THE SEATTLE TIMES

"Every sphere of human activity has some plastic
residue in the ocean," says retired oceanographer and
flotsam expert Curt Ebbesmeyer, here sorting trash
collected from the beach at the Ocean Shores
Beachcombers Fair.

Enlarge this photo

STEVE RINGMAN / THE SEATTLE TIMES

All her life, June Condon, right, has walked
Washington's beaches, hoping to discover a glass
fishing float washed in from Asia. Instead, she and
her mom, Dolly Schenk, find lots of trash, which they
clean up and dispose of in the plastic bags they
always carry.

Enlarge this photo

STEVE RINGMAN / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Yes, it floats! This bowling ball, encrusted with
barnacles and bryozoa, may have drifted on ocean
currents for decades before eventually landing in the
basement collection of Curt Ebbesmeyer.

Enlarge this photo

Enlarge this photo

STEVE RINGMAN / THE SEATTLE TIMES

In two hours this spring, 19 people collected 1,500
pounds of litter during a Dash for Trash in Ocean
Shores. Ebbesmeyer identified trash that likely
circulated the globe on ocean currents, perhaps
getting trapped for decades in the Pacific Ocean's
Great Garbage Patch. Ebbesmeyer edits a flotsam
newsletter called Beachcomber's Alert and is starting
a Web site, www.beachcombers.org.

Enlarge this photo

STEVE RINGMAN / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Ellen Anderson felt sick when she found a bird carcass
— its gut filled with plastic — on an Ocean Park beach
path. She vowed to use the bird's death to educate
people about plastic litter.

Enlarge this photo

STEVE RINGMAN / THE SEATTLE TIMES

On the sand at Ocean Shores, beachcombers learn how to
"read" the beach by looking at the tide line, beach
grass, plastic trash. Their teacher is beachcombing
expert Alan Rammer, marine-education specialist with
the Washington Dept. of Fish and Wildlife.

SOMETHING RED CAUGHT Ellen Anderson's eye. Something
sharp and bright, out of place amidst the muted colors
and gentle rhythms of the dunes.

Anderson stepped off the little path that wound from
her Ocean Park weekend house to a sandy stretch along
the Washington coast. She parted the long beach
grasses. She stared, shocked: A dead bird, its exposed
belly filled with shiny bits of plastic. Chunks
yellowed like old teeth, a perforated pink rectangle,
hairy tan slivers. A red shard had first captured her
attention.

"My gut hurt. It was a glorious day, sunny, a treasure
in May. Everything was great. And then I saw that bird
and I was sick to my stomach," Anderson recently
recalled. "You jump to conclusions. Like, did the bird
eat all that plastic? I was hoping it hadn't been
consumed by the bird, that somebody planted it there
as a joke or something."

But it was no joke. Back in Seattle, where she's a
computer analyst for Group Health, Anderson e-mailed
photographs of the bird's carcass to experts at the
University of Washington, Department of Fish and
Wildlife, State Parks, Ocean Conservancy and Willapa
National Wildlife Refuge.

"Yes — Ellen — it is just as you suspected," wrote the
Conservancy's Charles Barr, in a reply echoed by the
others. "Seabirds are eating plastics that become
lodged in their stomachs, causing death. I have seen
dozens of photos such as this one — most of . . . dead
albatross on the Pacific Islands of Midway and the
Northwest Hawaiian Islands. . . . Many of the
albatross will even return to their nests to feed, by
regurgitation, plastics to their chicks."

To fully understand the big deal over Anderson's dead
bird, you need to know it was not a seagull. It was a
Northern fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis), identified by a
tube atop its beak that spurts out excess salt. Like
albatross and other pelagic seabirds, fulmars spend
their whole lives way, way out in the ocean, coming to
shore only during summer breeding, when females lay a
single white egg on cliffs.

The rest of the time, the fulmars skim the waves,
flying thousands of miles a year, feeding on small
fish and jellyfish, crustaceans and larvae. "They're
out on the open ocean where there's tremendous
competition for scarce food, so they don't stop to
look before grabbing whatever it is on the surface,"
says Alan Rammer, marine-education specialist with
Fish and Wildlife. "Down the craw! Eat and go. As much
and as fast as they can. Gorge and get back to the
nest to feed the babies."

Fulmars have been around for millennia, and live as
long as 40 years. Yet in the span of a generation,
their diet has drastically changed. Now they feast on
plastic.

Their taste for plastic makes them like canaries in a
coal mine, or rather, fulmars floating in flotsam. The
dead seabirds tell us about the ocean's health.

Dutch researchers have used the fulmars to monitor
litter in the North Sea, analyzing the stomach
contents of hundreds of birds over two decades. In the
early 1980s, 92 percent of the fulmars had ingested
plastic; on average, 12 pieces. By the late 1990s, 98
percent of bird stomachs contained plastic, an average
31 pieces.

advertising
The fulmar Anderson found along the path at Ocean Park
held 59 plastic bits. This spring, Rammer displayed
them in a glass bottle at the annual Beachcombers Fun
Fair in Ocean Shores, along with a picture of the dead
bird.

He hypothesized that the fulmar, while foraging at
sea, got blown in with a storm and collapsed in the
tall grass, starved and weak because it didn't have
enough real nutrients in its belly.

"You look at the jagged edges of those pieces," Rammer
says. They got stuck. "It couldn't process and
assimilate food in its digestive tract. Nothing goes
in, nothing comes out. I don't have any doubt in my
mind. It died as a result of plastic poisoning. And I
have no doubt there are millions of others like it."

WITH DEFT FINGERS, Curt Ebbesmeyer sorted the 59
pieces: A broken toy hockey stick, turquoise chips, a
red screw-on cap crammed with granules — nurdles — raw
industrial pellets the size of an "o" from which all
other plastic things are made. One piece of birch
bark.

"What's this bird been doing? Where's it been?"
Ebbesmeyer frowned. "Out of 59 pieces: one natural,
the rest plastic." He pointed to a curved red disc
encrusted with white bryozoa, a slow-growing
moss-animal. "That's been around a long time," he
said, guessing the worn plastic had drifted in the
ocean for decades before the fulmar snatched it up.
"Some of what we're looking at here could be up to a
half-century old."

Ebbesmeyer, a retired oceanographer, is considered a
world expert on flotsam, the miscellaneous stuff that
floats the seas and circulates the globe on strong
currents — sometimes for decades. What's trash to
other people is evidence to Ebbesmeyer, who, like a
forensic beachcomber, uses telltale clues, the
Internet, the phone and mapping software of ocean
currents to trace what it is, where it came from and
what story it's telling.

"Everything has a meaning," he says. "Everything has a
deeper significance."

Take a piece of plastic marked "VP-101" found in the
stomach of a dead Laysan albatross chick along with
cigarette lighters, bottle caps and hundreds of other
pieces of plastic (all pictured in National
Geographic, October 2005). Ebbesmeyer helped confirm
that "VP-101" was likely a Bakelite tag for a U.S.
Navy patrol squadron during World War II, and could,
indeed, have floated in the ocean for 60 years before
the albatross swallowed it.

Here's the back story: While grazing for food to feed
its baby, Ebbesmeyer says, the albatross parent may
have picked the war relic out of the Pacific Ocean's
Great Garbage Patch.

The Garbage Patch is at least twice the size of Texas,
hovers midway between Hawaii and San Francisco, and is
filled with, you guessed it, trash.

Huge, rotating currents of air and water created the
Garbage Patch. At the Equator, air gets hot, rises and
drifts toward the cooler North Pole. Earth's rotation
moves the heated air westward; in the north, the
cooled air descends and moves eastward, creating a
massive clockwise rotation above the Pacific. The
swirling air drives an oceanic current below called
the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre.

If, starting at the Washington coast, you waded into
this humongous oval current, you'd float about 14,000
miles — down the California coast, then southwest past
Hawaii, toward Vietnam and the Philippines, then up to
Japan and back across the ocean to where you started.
It would take about six years. If you happened to
reach the Pacific Northwest coast during winter, the
Davidson current might carry you north to Alaska,
where the Alaska Stream would push you into the Bering
Sea and through the Bering Strait into the Arctic
Ocean. With any luck, you'd surf the waves past
Iceland and wind up bobbing in the North Atlantic. A
more likely scenario is that you'd continue riding the
gyre, slipping south toward California for another
go-round.

Unless, that is, you escaped the gyre and washed
ashore. Or got trapped in the Garbage Patch: trash
purgatory.

Old as the wind and ocean, the Garbage Patch is a
natural phenomenon. For eons, long-lived sea beans,
driftwood and other stuff has accumulated there.
What's new is that it's now home to plastic debris
that doesn't biodegrade.

That's the "deeper significance" of "VP-101," the
60-year-old relic eaten by the albatross chick. It's
the "meaning" behind the 59 plastic bits in the fulmar
Ellen Anderson discovered at Ocean Park.

Think of all the plastic that winds up in the ocean —
from every country on the Pacific Rim, every river
flowing into the ocean, any fishing vessel out at sea,
any freight container fallen overboard, any factory
intentionally or accidentally dumping, any vacationer
careless with a pop bottle, sandwich baggie or plastic
doll. "Every sphere of human activity has some plastic
residue in the ocean," Ebbesmeyer says. Some of it may
sink. Some of it may be ground into plastic dust; no
comfort, since it's ingested by filter feeders such as
clams, believed to be portals to the food chain.

We love plastic because it's cheap, light and durable.
The problem is that it doesn't go away.

"People think something put in the ocean is out of
sight, out of mind," Ebbesmeyer says. "But the ocean
moves it all around the planet. It's like one big
nest."

THE NORTHWEST coast is one of the world's top
beachcombing areas because the North Pacific
Subtropical Gyre turns here, dumping lots of debris.

Much of it seems to fill the basement of Ebbesmeyer's
tidy Ravenna bungalow: A barnacle-encrusted bowling
ball (yes, David Letterman, bowling balls up to 12
pounds will float); Japanese survey stakes; messages
in bottles, hockey gloves from a container that
spilled 34,000 of them; Nike tennis shoes and cross
trainers from container spills between 1990 and 2003
(currents carried the lefts to certain beaches, the
rights to other shores); 29,000 First Years bathtub
toys (yellow ducks, blue turtles, green frogs, red
beavers) that have traveled the world's seas on paths
predicted, with eerie accuracy, by Ebbesmeyer and
oceanographer Jim Ingraham using sophisticated
computer simulations.

"Everything on the beach has a cool story," Ebbesmeyer
says. "You just have to wring its little neck to
figure it out."

Ebbesmeyer is a tall, gentle guy who frequently
lectures to school groups and beachcombers. His face
lights up while talking about the sea's trashy
treasures, but sooner or later come the inevitable
questions about what he calls "the dark side."

How many container spills annually? Several thousand.
Nike is one of the few companies to help Ebbesmeyer
trace the origin of spills. Other companies claim no
knowledge of lost merchandise. Since containers create
but a fraction of the litter in the sea, Ebbesmeyer
says, cleanup isn't even on regulatory radar. Yet
consider that one container can hold hundreds of
thousands of plastic bags, he says, each with the
potential to choke a sea turtle. And don't forget the
million weather balloons dropping thousands of
electronic boxes into the waves . . . the abandoned
fishing gear . . . the plastic residue from fireworks
. . .

Where does this stuff, including drums filled with
toxic chemicals, come from? Hard to tell.

How long does plastic last in the ocean? Nobody knows.

Plastic was invented in the 1860s and first used as an
alternative material for billiard balls carved from
ivory elephant tusks. Soon, plastic spun through early
celluloid movie reels. Then came Bakelite, cellophane,
nylons, vinyl couches, Teflon, Silly Putty, Velcro . .
.

Remember the 1967 film "The Graduate''? In it, Mr.
Robinson offered only one word of advice to Dustin
Hoffman: Plastics. Then came throwaway TV dinner
trays, plastic pop bottles, shrink-wrapped packaging.
These days, the world annually produces 250 billion
pounds of plastic pellets to be made into cars,
computers, medical equipment, gallon jugs for milk.

What's being done? Along our country's coasts for the
past decade, "citizen pollution patrols" in the
National Marine Debris Monitoring Program (sponsored
by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Ocean
Conservancy) have swept and sorted, determining 42
percent of beach litter comes from land, 20 percent
from water and 38 percent, either water or land. In
Congress, Senators Ted Stevens, Daniel Inouye and
Maria Cantwell, among others, have introduced a bill
calling for a federal program to assess, reduce and
prevent marine debris. It passed the House; the Senate
is expected to vote on it this spring.

The United Nations Environmental Program, Australia
and the United Kingdom are working on fishing-waste
management. Grassroots groups, including Green Peace,
are starting to trawl for plastics. But so far,
there's no coordinated international effort similar in
scale, say, to the Kyoto Protocol.

"It's not as sexy as global warming, but it's
definitely pervasive," says debris expert Seba
Sheavly. "Marine debris affects every major body of
water on the planet."

Everyone agrees you cannot clean up the ocean. The
focus, Sheavly says, should be on prevention and waste
management. Optimists say the throwaway lifestyle will
be over by 2050, that people will demand each product
have a path back into production.

Ebbesmeyer is not an optimist. He's seen too many
studies that never went anywhere.

"If you could fast forward 10,000 years and do an
archeological dig, a core sample down through the
beach, you'd find a little line of plastic," he says.
"What happened to those people? Well, they ate their
own plastic and disrupted their genetic structure and
weren't able to reproduce. They didn't last very long
because they killed themselves. . .

"Mother Nature is writing to us, and she writes to us
on the beach," he says. "The ocean is warning us, and
if we don't listen, it's very easy for her to get rid
of us."

CAPTAIN CHARLES Moore has been there. Sailed right
through the Garbage Patch, about 1,000 nautical miles,
on his research catamaran Alguita.

Seeing the Garbage Patch from a plane doesn't do the
flotsam justice; the trash is too dispersed, some of
it suspended below the surface or hidden by waves.
Sailing, it's in your face.

"I often struggle to find words that will communicate
the vastness of the Pacific Ocean to people who have
never been to sea. Day after day, Alguita was the only
vehicle on a highway without landmarks, stretching
from horizon to horizon. Yet as I gazed from the deck
at the surface of what ought to have been a pristine
ocean, I was confronted, as far as the eye could see,
with the sight of plastic," Moore wrote in Natural
History in 2003.

In August 1998, Moore and his crew extensively sampled
the surface waters of the North Pacific Subtropical
Gyre with a fine-mesh net resembling a manta ray.
"What we saw amazed us," Moore said in an analysis for
the 2001 Marine Pollution Bulletin. "We were looking
at a rich broth of minute sea creatures mixed with
hundreds of colored plastic fragments — a
plastic-plankton soup." The team collected six times
more plastic particles (by weight) than zooplankton.

Moore calls the plastic particles "poison pills"
because they absorb and concentrate toxic chemicals,
acting like sponges for DDT, PCBs and other oily
pollutants. "It's a serious situation," he says, "when
you've got a material that comes in all shapes and
sizes, can mimic every type of food in the sea, and is
capable of absorbing persistent pollutants that are
endocrine disruptors. . . . One hundred thousand
marine mammals a year are killed by entanglement (with
plastic six-pack rings, fishing lines and nets); I'm
not minimizing that. But the actual ability to wipe
out the entire vertebrate kingdom in the ocean is with
the plastic particles."

THE DASH for trash at the beachcombers fair this year
yielded 1,500 pounds of litter collected in driving
rain by 19 people in two hours.

Ebbesmeyer sorted through it with his bare hands:
Thousands of plastic parts from spent fireworks,
screw-cap rings, beer bottles, single-cigarette cases,
plastic oyster spacers, styrofoam buoys, fishing gear,
fluorescent tube lights, toy trucks, plastic kite
winder, hagfish traps, shotgun shell casings, the
plastic ball from a Ban deodorant stick, soap-bubble
wands, tires, combs, motor oil and antifreeze bottles,
tampon applicators, tobacco tins, a walkie talkie, a
cellphone, an inhaler, snow scrapers, several flip
flops, none matching.

An old glass bottle was awarded a prize. A Trash
Family sculpture created by Erma Stevenson also took
several awards, including People's Choice.

But the prize beachcombers craved most was a
traditional Japanese fishing float. These glass
bubbles ride the gyre from Asia, sometimes washing
ashore and hiding in nooks at high-tide line. The
rarest are worth thousands of dollars, but it's not
just about money. Fragile and elusive, the baubles
hold a certain romance.

"If only my daughter could find one, I'd be so happy,"
says Dolly Schenk, her head protected from the rain by
a plastic IGA grocery sack. Her grown daughter, June
Condon of Graham, has been searching for glass balls
most of her life, more intensely since her mother
moved to Ocean Shores 15 years ago. So far, no luck.
Instead, while walking the beach together, the mother
and daughter find trash. They always bring along
plastic bags to collect it.

Finding glass balls takes strategy, explains Rammer,
the marine-education specialist, during an
early-morning beach walk.

You must understand the sea's choreography. Wait for
high winds from the west. First will come the little
hydra jellyfish that look like tiny blue boats with
white sails. Next come Dixie cups, light bulbs,
plastic bottles with high surface area and low drag.
Big glass floats riding high in the water wash in 24
to 36 hours later, then the smaller glass bubbles, and
finally, the crème de la crème — glass rolling pins.
When waterlogged driftwood washes up, the show is
over.

Look here, at the high-tide line, Rammer urges. We
peer under logs and into European beach grass, not
really expecting to find anything.

But we do.

Another dead fulmar.

It's nestled in the sand, flesh still intact and
covered by soft, grey tufts of feathers. Part of me
wants to dissect it, to check if its belly is crammed
with plastic. Instead, we decide to leave the poor
bird in peace.

Enough evidence is already all around.

A few steps away from the bird: a crumbling styrofoam
Cup-of-Noodles.

Way out in the ocean: 29,000 plastic bathtub toys. Six
times more plastic than plankton. A Garbage Patch
continually swallowing trash it can't digest.

Around noon, the rain finally stops.

Out to sea, the horizon still looks grim.

Paula Bock is a Pacific Northwest magazine staff
writer. Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Steve Ringman
is a Seattle Times staff photographer.



__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
http://mail.yahoo.com 


contact owner: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Mail list: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Delivered-To: mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED]
List-Unsubscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

no flaming arguing or denigration of others allowed
contact owner with complaints regarding posting/list 
or anything else.  Thank you.
please share/comment/inform and mostly enjoy this list

 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/quick_vegetarian/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to