Plastic
debris reaches Southern Ocean, previously thought to be pristine
Researchers
on 70,000-mile voyage to investigate climate change say effect of
humans is now 'truly planetary'
27
September, 2012
The
first traces of plastic debris have been found in what was thought to
be the pristine environment of the Southern Ocean, according to a
study released in London by the French scientific research vessel
Tara.
The
finding comes following a two-and-a-half-year, 70,000-mile voyage by
the schooner across the Atlantic, Pacific, Antarctic and Indian
Oceans, to investigate marine ecosystems and biodiversity under
climate change.
"We
had always assumed that this was a pristine environment, very little
touched by human beings," said Chris Bowler, scientific
co-ordinator of Tara Oceans. "The fact that we found these
plastics is a sign that the reach of human beings is truly planetary
in scale."
Samples
taken from four different stations at locations in the Southern Ocean
and Antarctica revealed traces of plastic at a measure of
approximately 50,000 fragments per square kilometre — a rate
comparable to the global average. While traces of plastic pollutants
are customary in many of the world's oceans, with the highest levels
found in the North Atlantic and North Sea, researchers had
anticipated rates in the Southern Ocean to be some 10 times lower
than the global average.
"Discovering
plastic at these very high levels was completely unexpected because
the Southern Ocean is relatively separated from the world's other
oceans and does not normally mix with them," Bowler explained
before unveiling Tara's findings at an event at the Science Museum in
London on Wednesday. The microscopic fragments, invisible until
accumulated in trawling nets, are the result of waste products such
as plastic bags and bottles, degraded over years or decades by UV
light and sea water. Tara researchers, whose work was recently hailed
by UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon, were also surprised to find that
synthetic fibres, largely constituted by clothing from
washing-machine residue, made up a significant portion of the plastic
fragments.
Identifying
the regional source of such general waste, which has made its way to
the Southern Ocean over some half a century, remains more
problematic. However, it is believed to originate from Africa, South
America or Australia.
The
fatal impact of plastic pollutants on the marine environment has been
widely observed, as birds and fish regularly consume waste products,
which can be easily mistaken for jellyfish or other prey but cannot
be degraded in the stomach. Plastics also slowly release toxins and
other chemical substances that work their way up the marine food
chain.
"It's
too late to do much about what's already out there at this stage, as
this stuff is going to hang around for thousands of years," said
Bowler. However, he says the best way to mitigate future pollution is
to advocate the use of biodegradable technologies while emphasising a
shift in consumer practices.
Tara
will continue its marine research activities in 2013 with a
groundbreaking mission to the Arctic circle to investigate the ocean
environment following the melting of Arctic ice as a result of
climate change.
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