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Related: About this forumThe Pacific Ocean has a plastic problem. Here's the bold plan to fix it.
Environmental group will use floating nets to snag plastic debris.In the Pacific Ocean halfway between California and Hawaii lies whats become known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a huge jumble of fishing nets, bottles, bags, and other plastic items as well as tiny bits of plastic debris. Its a vast plastic soup, says Kahi Pacarro, executive director of Honolulu-based Sustainable Coastlines Hawaii.
Weve known about the existence of the patch since the mid-1980s but weren't quite sure about its size until a study published last March showed that it holds at least 79,000 tons of plastic and covers an area three times the size of France.
And the aggregation of trash is growing, says Richard Thompson, a marine biologist at Plymouth University in the U.K. who has studied plastic waste and wasnt involved in the paper. Its a big cause for concern, he says.
The patch presents more than an aesthetic problem. The debris entangles and kills all sorts of sea animals, including turtles, dolphins, and whales, and breaks down into microscopic particles that are consumed by fish and filter feeders like mussels and oysters. When we eat these animals, we may, in turn, consume those particles with unknown effects on our health.
And the Great Pacific Garbage Patch isn't the only one out there. It's technically known as the eastern Pacific Garbage Patch because there is another collection of trash in the western Pacific. Similar aggregations can be found in the oceans' four other circular currents, or gyres, with one patch each in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean and two in the Atlantic. Some researchers object to the term "patch," as it connotes a heap of visible plastic, when in reality most of the trash floats invisibly in small pieces below the surface.
Much more: https://www.nbcnews.com/mach/science/pacific-ocean-has-plastic-problem-here-s-bold-plan-fix-ncna867456
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The Pacific Ocean has a plastic problem. Here's the bold plan to fix it. (Original Post)
Rhiannon12866
Apr 2018
OP
The only photo I can come up with is the one from the article - which looks bad enough:
Rhiannon12866
Apr 2018
#2
In the article, they mention one 3x as big as France! Now that one should be visible from anywhere!
Rhiannon12866
Apr 2018
#4
Maybe I don't understand it well enough, but I also wondered what would prevent them from snagging
Rhiannon12866
Apr 2018
#7
cbreezen
(694 posts)1. I'm still waiting for a satellite view.
Where is it? I'm not saying it doesn't exist. I just want more proof.
ETA: I've been waiting for more than just a news story.
Rhiannon12866
(206,073 posts)2. The only photo I can come up with is the one from the article - which looks bad enough:
cbreezen
(694 posts)3. Great local shot...
but, word has it that this dump is the size of Texas. Should be easily spotted from the space station, but no pics available.
Rhiannon12866
(206,073 posts)4. In the article, they mention one 3x as big as France! Now that one should be visible from anywhere!
We've known about the existence of the patch since the mid-1980s but weren't quite sure about its size until a study published last March showed that it holds at least 79,000 tons of plastic and covers an area three times the size of France.
cbreezen
(694 posts)5. Indeed.
pansypoo53219
(20,997 posts)6. what about the mini bits?
Rhiannon12866
(206,073 posts)7. Maybe I don't understand it well enough, but I also wondered what would prevent them from snagging
The sea life that this effort is meant to protect? In my area of New York, dredging of the Hudson River has been a very divisive issue and I wondered the same thing about that.