Drifting plastic rafts of usefulness. Who would have thought
that – definitely not me when I began my research into plastics in our Oceans.
On the outset, I stood firmly in the camp that plastic debris –
our mismanaged rubbish - in the ocean is all bad, until I read the interesting
paper by Goldstein and colleagues (2012). The paper talks about how the sea
skater, Halobates sericeus, uses
floating plastic debris for eggs deposits. The authors demonstrate this species’
resourcefulness at using a modern day twist on more traditional vessels of
wood, squid backbones or volcanic pumice. With the abundance of plastic debris
in the oceans, this relatively new source for laying their eggs on serves this
species well.
This shows one way our waste is being useful… kind of…
However, there is a flip
side to the usefulness of plastic debris in our marine environment and that is
as a transportation method whereby non-native species are hitching rides on
man-made objects to jettison to new frontiers. Derriak (2002), Eriksen and
colleagues (2013), and Gall & Thompson (2015) all mention in their research
papers about this very thing. Non-native species arriving to new countries, and
the travel paid essentially by people all over the planet unknowingly. However,
for some countries, such as New Zealand which has a high rate of endemism in
our fauna and flora, this is a potential risk to biosecurity. One that boarder
control could very easily miss as just a pile of rubbish.
References:
Derraik,
J. G. (2002). The pollution of the marine environment by plastic debris: a
review. Marine pollution bulletin, 44(9),
842-852.
Eriksen, M., Maximenko, N., Thiel, M., Cummins, A.,
Lattin, G., Wilson, S., & Rifman, S. (2013). Plastic pollution in the South
Pacific subtropical gyre. Marine pollution bulletin, 68(1),
71-76.
Gall, S.
C., & Thompson, R. C. (2015). The impact of debris on marine life. Marine pollution bulletin, 92(1),
170-179.
Goldstein,
M. C., Rosenberg, M., & Cheng, L. (2012). Increased oceanic microplastic
debris enhances oviposition in an endemic pelagic insect. Biology letters, 8(5), 817-820.
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ReplyDeleteThe good fight against marine pollution continues! I saw this today that you might find interesting Emma: http://www.thelatestnews.com/scientist-produces-first-completely-recyclable-biopolymer-plastic/ peer reviewed? (I think not) Interesting though in the light of the worldwide pollution problems you've been looking at.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link. Interesting for sure.
DeleteIsn't that nuts! What an eye-opener, you can never really appreciate the scope of environmental impact till it happens. I walked the Waikareao Estuary the other day. It was pretty disheartening to see shore birds maneuvering their way through piles of rubbish while people walked by, commenting on the beauty of the place, totally oblivious to the reality of what was right in front of them.
ReplyDelete