These images show the true impact of plastics on our oceans
The shocking truth about plastic
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Many of us are doing our bit to reduce plastic pollution by recycling and reducing single-use items such as bags and straws, but is it enough? With hundreds of thousands of tonnes of plastic leaking into our seas annually and plastics having been found in all corners of the ocean, there is no doubting the impact they're having on waterways and marine ecosystems. These powerful and hard-hitting images show the horrifying extent of damage. Also read on to discover which countries are responsible for the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
Plastic bobs in the ocean in Bali, Indonesia
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Plastic waste, Panama City, Panama
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Plastic litter, Cape Town, South Africa
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Plastic pollution, River Thames estuary, UK
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Lots of plastic waste can be seen washed up along the shoreline of the Thames Estuary which then drifts out to the North Sea. This image was taken in Purfleet, Essex, home to saltmarshes that are an important feeding ground for wading birds and other marine life. According to a Greenpeace report that looked at the extent of plastic contamination in 13 rivers across Britain, the River Thames was second worst, after the Mersey. The majority of plastic that enters our oceans, spills out from rivers.
Plastic debris, the Erme Estuary, Devon, UK
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Ghost nets found in the Baltic Sea, Europe
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So-called ghost nets, or abandoned fishing gear, are a major problem for creatures of all shapes and sizes in oceans all around the world. Here a marine biologist rescues a little crab that became snared in a ghost net as it floated around the Baltic Sea. Every year thousands of plastic fishing nets land in the North Sea and Baltic Sea.
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Rubbish retrieved in Beirut, Lebanon
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A turtle swimming among plastic, Asia-Pacific
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A fish swimming among plastic, Asia-Pacific
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Plastics cause diseases to coral reefs, Asia-Pacific
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Plastics have a detrimental effect on the world’s coral reefs too, becoming entangled on the marine organisms and leading to diseases. According to a research study undertaken by scientists at Cornell University in the US, which was published in the journal Science, more than 11 billion items of plastic were found on a third of coral reefs surveyed in the Asia-Pacific region. A figure that they predicted would increase to more than 15 billion by 2025.
Plastics cause diseases to coral reefs, Asia-Pacific
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Coral reefs are not just important ecosystems for myriad marine species, but they also protect coastal areas by reducing the power of waves hitting the coast. The same study found reefs near Indonesia contained the most plastic with Thailand and Myanmar in the middle and Australia’s reefs the least affected. The ensnared plastics causes potentially fatal conditions for coral, including skeletal eroding band disease, that causes gradual destruction.
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Microplastics wash ashore, Hawaii, USA
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It’s not just visible pieces of plastic that are damaging our oceans but microplastics. Defined as any plastic less than 5mm, these plastics can come from microbeads in beauty products, fibres from synthetic clothes, and larger items that have broken down. As well as harming the fish, seabirds, turtles, whales and shellfish that eat them (research has shown that they can adversely affect growth and reproduction), they also enter our food chain with an average European seafood consumer ingesting an estimated 11,000 plastic particles a year, according to the Marine Conservation Society. This image shows tiny sections of plastic washed up on a beach in Hawaii.
Egrets fish in plastic-strewn waters, the Philippines
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Heron snares fish caught in a plastic bag, Florida, USA
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Divers clean up the ocean floor, Okinawa, Japan
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Plastic litters critical wetlands, the Maldives
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Litter left by beachgoers, Athens, Greece
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Fishermen net plastic, Tuscany, Italy
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Mediterranean fishermen know only too well how plastic is polluting the sea and directly affecting their livelihood and a vital food source. Often the day’s catch also nets discarded water bottles. As part of a project called Arcipelago Pulito, Tuscan fisherman working in the Tyrrhenian Sea bring ashore the plastic they collect and take it for recycling at a specialised plant. About 10% of the volume of each fish haul caught is plastic waste.
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Disposable face masks, California, USA
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A recent study revealed that disposable face masks, used widely in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, release harmful chemical pollutants and nano-plastics into the environment. So it's concerning to see that they've been washing up on beaches, including LA's Long Beach and several others along the North Californian coast. According to beach clean-up charity Heal the Bay, up to 2,000 pieces of PPE including masks were found on LA county beaches in the second half of 2020.
Who's responsible for this collection of plastics in the Pacific Ocean?
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This huge collection of marine debris in the North Pacific Ocean is infamously known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and was amassed as part of the Ocean Cleanup back in 2019. Since then, scientists have analysed the data from the objects which include discarded fishing gear such as eel traps, oyster spacers, lobster and fish tags, plus plastic floats and buoys, and worked out which countries are responsible. Japan and China are responsible for two-thirds of the trash, while South Korea (10%), America (6.5%), Taiwan (5.6%) and Canada (4.7%) account for the rest.
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