9.9 C
London
Saturday, April 27, 2024
HomeSciencePlastic pollution: birds on every continent live in our trash.

Plastic pollution: birds on every continent live in our trash.

On every continent but Antarctica, nesting or entangled birds have been photographed in our garbage.

People from all across the world submitted photographs to the online project Birds and Debris.

The project’s experts report seeing birds entangled or nesting in everything from rope and fishing line to balloon ribbon and a pair of flip-flops.

78fs 1
Plastic pollution: birds on every continent live in our trash.

Nearly one-fourth of the images depict birds nesting or becoming trapped in disposable face masks.

The initiative focuses on documenting the impact of garbage, specifically plastic pollution, on the avian world.

“Essentially, if a bird constructs a nest utilizing long fibrous materials, such as seaweed, branches, or reeds, there is a good possibility it will include human detritus in the nest,” said Dr. Alex Bond of the Natural History Museum in London, one of the researchers involved.

8ygd
Plastic pollution: birds on every continent live in our trash.

The initiative, which he and his team have been working on for four years, aims to call attention to the pervasive environmental problem of plastic garbage.

“Once you begin searching for this material, you will find it everywhere,” he remarked. We received reports from Japan, Australia, Sri Lanka, the United Kingdom, and North America, indicating that this is genuinely a global issue.

In a recent study, the team examined how many of the submitted photographs depict pandemic-related personal protection equipment (PPE). They discovered that it appeared in about a quarter of the submitted images.

“It’s virtually entirely masked,” Dr. Bond stated. “And if you consider the many components that a surgical mask is comprised of, there’s the elastic that gets tangled around birds’ legs, or the fabric or the hard piece of plastic that fixes it over your nose.

Masks are a fantastic example of the variety of polymers that fall under the umbrella word “plastic.”

Ue8u
Plastic pollution: birds on every continent live in our trash.

The researchers state that they wish to draw attention to the “systemic problem” that causes so much trash to wind up in the ecosystem.

The lead researcher, Justine Ammendolia of Dalhousie University in Canada, told that it was “devastating” to witness the global impact on species.

“In April of 2020, the first observation of a bird hanging from a facemask in a tree was reported in Canada, and subsequent sightings spread globally,” she explained. It merely highlights the damage that humans are capable of doing to the global environment in a very brief period.

7wgfs
Plastic pollution: birds on every continent live in our trash.

“Changing to a bamboo toothbrush or a canvas shopping bag would not save the world,” Dr. Bond explained, “since the majority of large-scale plastic production today is commercial and industrial.”

Therefore, ‘enough is enough is a combination of top-down policies and bottom-up pressure.

He compared the worldwide action necessary to address plastic pollution to the Montreal Protocol, which prohibited ozone-depleting chemicals and is widely regarded as one of the most effective global agreements ever negotiated.

“The same is required for plastic pollution, and we are moving in that direction, albeit very, very slowly.”

RELATED ARTICLES

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most Popular

US penalties fail to halt Israeli settler attacks

On October 13, dozens of Israeli settlers invaded the village of Tajamaa al-Murajaat in the occupied West Bank, much to the terror of Haitham Kaabna and his family.  As they assaulted farmers, the settlers, he claims, were protected by the army and carried M16 assault rifles. Settlers pillaged olive groves, vandalized automobiles, and abducted livestock for two weeks. A forced evacuation of approximately 200 Palestinian households from Tajamaa al-Murajaat, located in the Jordan Valley, resulted from the violence.

Stolen pets cause emotional trauma similar to losing a kid

The indomitable connection that pets and their owners form is common knowledge.  Now, research confirms that they truly do feel like members of the family, as the psychological anguish associated with losing a child is comparable to that of having a dog taken, according to one study.  In interviews with owners whose dogs had been stolen, researchers inquired about the owners' requirements and experiences.

Burkina Faso military accused of civilian massacre

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has issued the allegation and demanded that the African Union and the United Nations provide investigators and assist local efforts to apprehend the perpetrators. In assaults on two villages, Burkina Faso military forces have been accused of massacring 223 civilians, including infants.

Scottish Greens-SNP power-sharing accord falls

After much deliberation, the first minister terminated the power-sharing agreement between the Scottish National Party and the Scottish Green Party. The action follows the government's decision to discontinue the prescription of puberty blockers for individuals under the age of 18 and to eliminate climate targets. First Minister Humza Yousaf is expected to face a motion of no confidence, as declared by the Conservatives.

Recent Comments