WILDLIFE > ECOSYSTEMS

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch

Dangerous amounts of plastic are piling up in the ocean

There is an island off the coast of California, known as Gilligan’s Island, that is made up of nearly 80 percent used and discarded plastic bags as well as other plastic garbage, that is twice the size of Texas and still growing! The Los Angeles Times calls this entire plastic bag island "an environmental atrocity” and I agree with that statement completely.

Called Gilligan’s Island in reference to the sitcom from the sixties, the reality is that this is no laughing matter. Scientifically it is called The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, or The Pacific Trash Vortex, as it swirls around almost halfway between the United States and Japan, literally out in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. It is quickly becoming an environmental hazard of huge proportions.

As the plastic slowly begins to degrade, bits and pieces are making its way into the food chain as aquatic life finds it hard to distinguish this garbage from food. Sea turtles, birds and others mistake this stuff as being edible, as an example, turtles think floating plastic bags are jellyfish and eat them, with the result that the plastic does not digest nor does it get passed as waste, literally gumming up the works and killing the unfortunate creature that ingested it.

This plastic garbage floats just beneath the surface and cannot be detected from the air or by satellite, but it there as sure as the water is there. The sun breaks down these plastics through photodegradation, causing the base chemical polymers to be released directly into the water. As a result, not only do the larger pieces of ingested plastic have the potential to kill anything that eats them, the broken down chemicals that are leaching into the water make the whole area poisonous.

As horrible as all this sounds, nothing is being done about it. Research into disposal or recycling has commenced, but there is no word on any facts, figures or solutions to clean up Gilligan’s Island. It just sits out there in the middle of the Pacific, swirling around and polluting everything it touches or that touches it.

Anyone who has been reading Because Action knows that plastic bags and bottles are the bane of my existence. We don’t need them, there is no reason to have them, and except for critical medical situations, they should be banished, outlawed and barred from use. And Because Action speaks louder than words, I have long since given up plastic use for the sake of convenience, and I have not lost one minute of sleep over that decision.

Source: BecauseAction.com

COMMENT ON ARTICLE
by dan
Floyd says Congress should allocate funds for cleanup. Ridiculous. Why is the island a uniquely American problem, and why should only American taxpayers flip the bill for it's cleanup? We make much ado in this country about clean air and saving trees, which is problematic in that we've driven jobs overseas to China and India where they absolutely do not care about the environment; ergo the Beijing Olympics where their pollution problems were front and center. Where is the international pressure for everyone to clean this up and to stop polluting our oceans?
by Barbara VanHanken
We need worldwide answers to stop building this poluting garbage island. Let us all act responsibly and recycle everything we can. This is our responsibility.
by paulaboub
Check out this blog from the Algalita. http://orvalguita.blogspot.com
by Gerld Mayanja
Thank you for bringing up this matter for the attention of the world. My only suggestion is that every sound headed world leader must be he head of state, king, pope,UN Sectary General must just have to wake up and contribute to the cleaning up of this garbage mess. Strong ant water dumping international laws must be put in place by the UN. These laws must not be limited to oceans alone but to all water bodies around the world because my own lake Victoria hear in East Africa is just being used as a waste dumping pit, so I cant now image what could be deposited at its base as of now. Dumping in water bodies must be treated next to nuclear weapon manufacturing by the whole world. What ever little help that I can give am ready to surrender if it can contribute to that sanity that is needed
by RecycleBill
Thanks for making knowledge of this problem more widespread. And thanks for the link.
by Mary Proulx
Plastic bags in all stores, etc. are a ecological disaster and should be banned. There is no reason for them...anyone who reads this article will never (if possible) use plastic bags again. Of course, plastic is in containers etc...what is one to do?.
by Shelly Pinks
It is a shame, what mankind has done to the earht and wildlife, you have my full support, please let me know how I can help.
by bob
I support your efforts with the problem of Gulligans Island and it needs to be dealt with. Paper bags are biodegradable, but then again they are a product of trees and wood pulp. So where is the trade off, Gulligans Island or sustainable usage of our forests?
by Floyd J Hardee (Words Hardee)
Congress should appropriate funds to send a team of ships and people to clean up the mess and to melt it down to be recycled. Better disposal methods should be adopted. Our farms lands are being gobbled up by land developers, our forest are being cut down and great multitudes of animals are losing their homes and their lives to greedy developers. We need to establish population control in a sane and sensible way. We need to reestablish green vegetative borders along our waterways and oceans or someday there will be no seafood on the table, nothing but plastic garbage bags left there by senseless man! Words Hardee, author of The Great Time Hawk In The Sky.
by Amy Nuckols
I, too, have given up plastic water bottles and plastic bags for my shopping, but until we can get everyone on board the plastic ban bandwagon, things will not change. It really saddens me that humanity has allowed this to happen to the ocean and to those who dwell there. Wake up, people and do your part to help our planet (and all on it) to survive. Where will we be without the ecology of our marine life? Everything affects everything, so we better get busy and clean up our acts.
by Jorge
Is that accumulation of trash a result of illegal dumping of material to the Oceans? May be we can find the source of those contaminants or they coming from big bucks corporations and covered by blankets made with 100 dollars bills.? Thank you.
by Paul Zink
You're quite right. Everyone should lobby supermarkets to ban these bags (as they now do in the UK), and for manufacturers and packagers to migrate away from plastic as much as possible.
by Iudith Mentzel
I agree with every word ! I would prefer to be myself one of those marine creatures ... rather than belong to the "advanced mankind" that kills them ... We don't deserve God's forgiveness for what we are doing for money ... and only for money, unfortunately the only "God" we all worship ...

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