Otago Daily Times

Island of plastic debris bigger than thought: study

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NEW YORK: A giant island of plastic floating in the Pacific Ocean holds as much as 16 times more debris than was previously thought, posing a significan­t threat to the food chain, scientists said yesterday.

The socalled garbage patch in waters between California and Hawaii consists of fishing nets, plastic containers, packaging and ropes, said the Ocean Cleanup Foundation, which headed up a study published in Scientific Reports, an online journal.

The research using aerial images revealed the mass of trash is much denser — as much as 16 times more dense — than had previously been estimated, the study said.

‘‘It’s shocking,’’ said Joost Dubois, a spokesman for the Netherland­sbased Ocean Cleanup Foundation, which led the team of researcher­s from seven countries.

Nearly 200 nations late last year signed a United Nations resolution to eliminate plastic pollution in the sea, a move some hope will pave the way to a legally binding treaty.

The new research estimates the accumulati­on is 79,000 metric tonnes (1.8 trillion pieces) of plastic. Most of those pieces are tiny microplast­ics, it said.

In another way of describing its size, Joost said it is made up of enough trash to fill 500 jumbo jets.

The plastic has accumulate­d into a mass due to currents, scientists say. The research studied a patch of more than 1.6 million square km of the ocean.

A petroleumb­ased product, plastic disintegra­tes slowly, and one item pulled from the patch was about 40 years old, they said.

It harms marine life by killing creatures such as turtles and dolphins that ingest it, and it harms humans by entering the food chain in the form of microplast­ics, said Dubois.

‘‘We’re basically poisoning our own food, especially for those of us relying on fish for our diet,’’ Dubois said. — Reuters

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