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Pacific plastic dump far larger than feared: study
By Patrick GALEY and Marlowe HOOD
Paris (AFP) March 22, 2018

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is getting bigger
Washington (UPI) Mar 22, 2018 - The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is now home to an estimated 160 million pounds of floating plastic refuge and encompasses an area of more than 600,000 square miles -- nearly the size of Alaska.

The latest estimates, the result of three years of research and two field expeditions, were published this week in the journal Scientific Reports.

In recent years, the gyre of floating plastic debris has accumulated a growing abundance of trash. Scientists with the Ocean Cleanup project estimate the patch now features 1.8 trillion pieces of trash.

Just 8 percent of the garbage patch is composed of tiny plastic fragments, microplastics, suspended just beneath the surface. The majority of the patch, 92 percent, is comprised of larger pieces -- a combination of of degraded containers, bottle caps, crates, floats and fishing gear. These large pieces reveal the patch's immense presence.

The latest survey revealed the patch to be anywhere from four to 16 times larger than previous estimates.

"We were surprised by the amount of large plastic objects we encountered," lead scientist Julia Reisser said in a press release. "We used to think most of the debris consists of small fragments, but this new analysis shines a new light on the scope of the debris."

Researchers used a combination of surveying techniques to measure the concentrations of different types and sizes of plastic debris.

Different sized nets trawled behind research vessels helped scientists measure the amounts of microplastics, mesoplastics and macroplastics within the confines of GPGP. For larger plastic pieces, so-called megaplastics, pieces larger than 50 centimeters, scientists with Ocean Cleanup conducted their first-ever aerial survey.

The research plane was outfitted with optical sensors programmed to identify larger pieces of plastic. Back in the lab, scientists combined the aerial observations with the data collected on the research vessels.

"Plastic pollution has been increasing exponentially in the subtropical waters of the North Pacific Ocean over the last decades," researchers wrote in a news release. "Yet, quantities of floating plastic reported are two orders of magnitude less than current global source input estimates."

In other words, there's plenty of plastic in the ocean that's unaccounted for. Scientists believe a considerable amount of plastic pollution is being transported to deeper ocean layers as its broken down into smaller pieces.

Moving forward, scientists with the Ocean Cleanup project plan to investigate how plastic is transported to the garbage patch, how long it stays there and where it goes as its broken down.

The vast dump of plastic waste swirling in the Pacific ocean is now bigger than France, Germany and Spain combined -- far larger than previously feared -- and is growing rapidly, a study published Thursday warned.

Researchers based in the Netherlands used a fleet of boats and aircraft to scan the immense accumulation of bottles, containers, fishing nets and microparticles known as the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch" (GPGP) and found an astonishing build-up of plastic waste.

"We found about 80,000 tonnes of buoyant plastic currently in the GPGP," Laurent Lebreton, lead author of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports, told AFP.

That's around the weight of 500 jumbo jets, and up to sixteen times greater than the plastic mass uncovered there in previous studies.

But what really shocked the team was the amount of plastic pieces that have built up on the marine gyre between Hawaii and California in recent years.

They found that the dump now contains around 1.8 trillion pieces of plastic, posing a dual threat to marine life.

Microplastics, tiny fragments of plastic smaller than 50mm in size that make up the vast majority of items in the GPGP, can enter the food chain when swallowed by fish.

The pollutants they contain become more concentrated as they work their way up through the food web, all the way to top level predators such as sharks, seals and polar bears.

"The other environmental impact comes from the larger debris, especially the fishing nets," said Lebreton.

These net fragments kill marine life by trapping fish and animals such as turtles in a process known as 'ghost fishing'.

The research team from the Ocean Cleanup Foundation, a Dutch start-up aiming to scoop up half the debris in the GPGP within five years, were surprised in particular in the build-up of larger plastic items, which accounted for more than 90 percent of the GPGP's mass.

This might offer a glimmer of hope, as larger plastics are far easier to find and fish out than microplastics.

- 'Single-use, throwaway society' -

Global plastics production hit 322 million tonnes in 2015, according to the International Organization for Standardization.

The Ocean Cleanup project, which carried out the study, says eight million tonnes of plastics enter the oceans every year, much of which has accumulated in five giant garbage patches around the planet.

To increase their ability to identify plastic pieces, researchers used 30 vessels and two aircraft including a C-130 Hercules fitted with advanced sensors that produced 3D scans of the GPGP.

They found that it now stretches 1.6 million square kilometres and, they warn, it's growing.

"The inflow of plastic to the patch continues to exceed the outflow," Lebreton said.

What's more, the scale of the largest plastic dump on the planet literally only scratches the surface of the problem.

"Levels of plastic pollution in deep water layers and seafloor below the GPGP remain unknown," the study warned.

The Foundation's team of 75 researchers and engineers plan to construct dozens of floating barriers to drift on the winds and currents and hoover up half the plastic in the patch within five years.

But Lebreton is keen to stress that the global damage wrought by plastic waste can only be mitigated by coordinated action.

"People look at the quantity of fishing gear (in the patch), and point a finger at the fishing industry, but then again they're eating the fish too. It's not so much this or that sector or region, it's the way we consume and live -- single-use plastics, throwaway society," he said.

"We need to take some serious action on that front. We'll solve this problem on a global scale."

The Ocean Cleanup was founded by 18-year-old Dutchman Boyan Slat in 2013.


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WATER WORLD
Seaweeds protect calcifying marine species from ocean acidification
(UPI) Mar 21, 2018
Ocean acidification is making it harder for calcifying marine species to construct their protective outer layers or shells. But new research suggests some organisms have found protection from lower pH levels among seaweed. As ocean water soaks up excess CO2 in the atmosphere, pH levels drop. Seaweed absorbs CO2 during the day, however, reducing the acidity in the water immediately surrounding their leaves. Researchers found a variety of calcifying species have found shelter in this so-ca ... read more

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