Fauxtography? While the oceans swim in plastics, Pollowitz calls those who photograph the results liars
There is grim news we must all face. Many of you who have been following our logs, or reading and viewing news reports, are aware of the shocking scenes that we found along the shoreline and reefs of these islands. Hundreds of seabirds, mostly young albatross, lie dead along the beaches with an endless variety of plastics lodged in their decomposing bodies. On almost every island we explored, the landscape was littered with the discarded products of human society from thousands of miles away -cigarette lighters, golf balls, toothbrushes, children’s toys, and fishing floats among others.
While the NWHI are largely uninhabited, the North Pacific gyre, a convergence zone of the entire North Pacific Ocean acts as a “pollution highway,” bearing plastic debris along its path. These plastics become encrusted with fish eggs and are plucked from the ocean by albatross adults seeking food for their chicks. They swallow the eggs encasing the plastics, return to their chicks, and regurgitate the deadly combination into the hungry mouths of their young. These young birds simply cannot digest plastic materials and the accumulation of plastics over the first six months of their lives can result in starvation and possible death.
The Midway Islands are home to some of the world’s most valuable and endangered species and they all are at risk from choking, starving or drowning in the plastic drifting in the ocean.
Nearly two million Laysan albatrosses live here and researchers have come to the staggering conclusion that every single one contains some quantity of plastic.
About one-third of all albatross chicks die on Midway, many as the result of being mistakenly fed plastic by their parents.
I watched as the deputy manager of the wildlife refuge here, Matt Brown, opened the corpse of one albatross and found inside it the handle of a toothbrush, a bottle top and a piece of fishing net.
He explained how some chicks never develop the strength to fly off the islands to search for food because their stomachs are filled with plastic.
“When the bird was opened up, it was immediately obvious what had happened,” he continued. “Its stomach was easily four to five times the size it should have been, and when you touched it, it was crunchy. There were two visible ulcers where sharp objects had ruptured its stomach from the inside. Seventy-five percent of its left lung was damaged with scar tissue and infection.”
Human carelessness killed this and dozens of other chicks. Our plastic castoffs were caught up in the same ocean currents and intermingled with the squid and flying fish eggs gathered by adult albatross off the North American coast. The parent birds inadvertently scoop up the toxic flotsam while flying thousands of miles to forage for nourishment to fly back and regurgitate to their young.
“This is the most remote island of the most remote island chain in all the world,” Liittschwager said. “This is as far away as you can get, anywhere, from human civilization.”
the biologist and Manager of the State of Hawaii’s Kure Atoll Wildlife
Sanctuary, who snapped the picture in question (and whom you can see
conducting one of the albatross necropsies below). She is apparently
not a liar. Pollowitz, are you a gentleman?
http://www.hawaiianatolls.org/research/June2006/albatross_death.php
http://www.oikonos.org/projects/Albatross_Activity_PDF/Tracking%20Trash%20and%20Albatross_v3.ppt
http://news.scotsman.com/science/Study-finds-plastic-in-95.2689629.jp
http://www.mindfully.org/Plastic/Ocean/Sea-Plastic-LN-PG5oct05.htm
http://www.military.com/news/article/coast-guard-news/coast-guard-removes-four-tons-of-debris.html
http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/archives/2007/2007-Jun-14/Article.cover_story/1/@@index
http://www.int-res.com/articles/meps/37/m037p295.pdf
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/pacificnw04232006/coverstory.html
http://www.abcbirds.org/newsandreports/birdconservation_pdf/marine.pdf
http://www.oceanslive.org/portal/index.php?module=pagesetter&type=file&func=get&tid=3&fid=document&pid=36
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