The Herald (South Africa)

Dead sperm whale found to have ingested 29kg of plastic

- Hannah Strange

A SPERM whale found dead on the coast of Murcia in southern Spain was killed by gastric shock caused by ingesting 29kg of plastic waste, authoritie­s in the region said.

The young male’s stomach and intestines were found to contain rubbish including plastic bags, raffia sacks, pieces of nets and ropes and even a plastic jerry can, marine experts said following a postmortem.

The whale, almost 10m long and weighing more than six tons, was found dead on a beach in Cabo de Palos at the end of February.

The grim discovery of the cause of death has prompted Murcia’s regional government to launch a campaign against the dumping of plastic waste in the ocean.

Consuelo Rosauro, the directorge­neral for the natural environmen­t in the Murcian government, said plastic waste in the ocean had become one of the biggest threats to marine life around the world in the last decade.

“Many animals get trapped in the rubbish or ingest great quantities of plastic which end up causing their death,” she said.

An endangered species, the sperm whale is the largest toothed whale and has the biggest brain of any creature on earth.

Its natural diet is composed mostly of squid and its expected lifespan is roughly equivalent to a human’s, at around 70 years.

Experts at Murcia’s El Valle Wildlife Rescue Centre, which carried out the postmortem on the young whale, said that it had been unable to either digest or expel the plastics in its system, and as a result had suffered a fatal case of peritoniti­s.

The Murcia campaign will be conducted in collaborat­ion with the European Environmen­tal Associatio­n and the European Fund for Regional Developmen­t, and will involve both awareness-raising and beach-cleaning operations.

Waste collected will be catalogued and analysed to determine its origin.

Conservati­onists are increasing­ly raising the alarm over the quantity of waste in the world’s oceans, with eight million tons of plastics said to be entering the marine environmen­t every year.

Sir David Attenborou­gh used the latest series of BBC’s Blue Planet, broadcast at the end of last year, to warn that the oceans are turning into a toxic soup of industrial waste and plastic.

“Industrial pollution and the discarding of plastic waste must be tackled for the sake of all life in the ocean,” he said.

Attenborou­gh said the crews had found plastics everywhere they had filmed, even in the most remote locations.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa