plastic and wildlife Archives - Plastic Waste Solutions
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The oceans are full of plastic – here’s what we can do about it – Australia
Posted on September 18, 2014 by DrRossH in Plastic & Wildlife, Plastic Waste NewsThe oceans are full of our plastic – here's what we can do about it. The more this huge problem gets publicity and the sooner it gets enough exposure to through to the public the better chance we'll...
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Plastic Bands are strangling Seals and Sea Lions – USA
Posted on February 14, 2014 by DrRossH in Plastic & WildlifeStrangling Seals and Sea Lions Young seal and sea lion pups tend to play with marine debris, not knowing the harm they can cause. Packing bands are sometimes found in the marine environment tangled up in a big...
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Top 10 Plastic Marine Litter Prevention Actions
Posted on February 11, 2014 by DrRossH in Plastic & WildlifeTop Ten Actions If only we could get governments and corporations to follow these actions.
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Plastic and politics: how bureaucracy is failing our forgotten wildlife
Posted on March 11, 2013 by DrRossH in Plastic & WildlifeGreenpeace Australia Pacific » Blog Archive » Plastic and politics: how bureaucracy is failing our forgotten wildlife. Accumulations of rubbish in the North Pacific Gyre were first noticed 20 years ago. Nicknamed the “Pacific Garbage Patch”, this area...
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Plastic in Remote Pacific Island
Posted on March 4, 2013 by DrRossH in Plastic & WildlifeThis video is quite heart wrenching. It is short and every one should see it. It is a very graphic illustration of the damage and the horrible deaths we are causing innocent wildlife 1000's of miles away because of...
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The Fatal Shore, Awash in Plastic
Posted on August 26, 2012 by DrRossH in Plastic & WildlifeThe Fatal Shore, Awash in Plastic - NYTimes.com. The horror resides mostly in the stomachs of young seabirds, primarily Laysan and black-footed albatrosses. The parents feed their young chicks by regurgitating food into their mouths, food they've gathered at sea...
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BC birds eating plastic pollution – Canada
Posted on July 20, 2012 by DrRossH in Plastic & WildlifeBC birds eating plastic pollution | Solid Waste & Recycling Magazine. The study, published in the Marine Pollution Bulletin, notes that 93 per cent of the birds studied had bellyfuls of plastic pollution from the Pacific Ocean – everything from...
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Rising plastic menace choking sealife
Posted on July 12, 2012 by DrRossH in Plastic & Wildlifehttp://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2012/07/09/3540635.htm#artBookmarks Is the value we get from a plastic straw or a plastic bag or similar worth this price? "It's very sad and disturbing to see so much plastic being ingested by these birds," says Avery-Gomm. "The birds usually have dozens of...
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B.C. birds eating plastic pollution
Posted on July 12, 2012 by DrRossH in Plastic & WildlifeB.C. birds eating plastic pollution | Solid Waste & Recycling Magazine. The study, published in the Marine Pollution Bulletin, notes that 93 per cent of the birds studied had bellyfuls of plastic pollution from the Pacific Ocean – everything from...
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How many people today grab a takeaway coffee cup from the local cafe to drink on the go? We don’t know, but the number must be enormous.. Most every one of the above have a plastic top that will last 100s of years. Some cafes still use plastic cups that last a similar time. Is 10 minutes of coffee worth 100s of years of trash?
These items can be seen littering our gutters and on our streets all over the place. If they were all cardboard, they would still be littered, but they would, at least, be gone in a short time.
They do not need to be made of plastic.
On the way home from the gym last week, a distance of about 1 km (1/2 mile), I counted the items of plastic litter on the curb as I walked. In that short distance I counted 63 pieces of plastic litter. Plastic drink bottles, bottle tops, candy wrappers, plastic film, polystyrene fragments etc. That seemed to be a lot to me. I guess it is a generational thing. Our parents would have been horrified to see that amount, whereas it seems to go unnoticed by our youth of today. In another 20 years how many pieces will there be on this stretch, -- 200? What will today’s youth think of that new amount then when they are older? Will their children be so readily accepting of a higher amount of litter?