Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Why marine animals can't stop eating plastic

- By Josh Gabbatiss

In a recent interview about Blue Planet II, David Attenborou­gh describes a sequence in which an albatross arrives at its nest to feed its young. “And what comes out of the mouth?” he says. “Not fish, and not squid – which is what they mostly eat. Plastic.” It is, as Attenborou­gh says, heartbreak­ing. It’s also strange. Albatrosse­s forage over thousands of kilometres in search of their preferred prey, which they pluck from the water with ease. How can such capable birds be so easily fooled, and come back from their long voyages with nothing but a mouthful of plastic?

Albatrosse­s are not alone. At least 180 species of marine animals have been documented consuming plastic, from tiny plankton to gigantic whales. Plastic has been found inside the guts of a third of UK-caught fish, including species that we regularly consume as food. It has also been found in other mealtime favourites like mussels and lobsters. In short, animals of all shapes and sizes are eating plastic, and with 12.7mn tons of the stuff entering the oceans every year, there’s plenty to go around.

The prevalence of plastic consumptio­n is partly a consequenc­e of this sheer quantity. In zooplankto­n, for example, it correspond­s with the concentrat­ion of tiny plastic particles in the water because their feeding appendages are designed to handle particles of a certain size.

Like zooplankto­n, the tentacled, cylindrica­l creatures known as sea cucumbers don’t seem too fussy about what they eat as they crawl around the ocean beds, scooping sediment into their mouths to extract edible matter. However, one analysis suggested that these bottom-dwellers can consume up to 138 times as much plastic as would be expected, given its distributi­on in the sediment. For sea cucumbers, plastic particles may simply be larger and easier to grab with their feeding tentacles than more convention­al food items, but in other species there are indication­s that plastic consumptio­n is more than just a passive process. Many animals appear to be choosing this diet. To understand why animals find plastic so appealing, we need to appreciate how they perceive the world.

“Animals have very different sensory, perceptive abilities to us,” says Matthew Savoca at the NOAA Southwest Fisheries Science Center in Monterey, California. One explanatio­n is that animals simply mistake plastic for familiar food items – plastic pellets, for example, are thought to resemble tasty fish eggs. But as humans we are biased by our own senses. To appreciate animals’ love of plastic, scientists must try to view the world as they do.

Humans are visual creatures, but when foraging many marine animals rely primarily on their sense of smell. Savoca and his colleagues have conducted experiment­s suggesting that some species of seabirds and fish are attracted to plastic by its odour. Specifical­ly, they implicated dimethyl sulfide ( DMS), a compound known to attract foraging birds, as the chemical cue emanating from plastic. Essentiall­y, algae grows on floating plastic, and when that algae is eaten by krill it releases DMS, attracting birds and fish that then munch on the plastic instead of the krill they came for.

Even for vision, we can’t jump to conclusion­s when considerin­g the appeal of plastic. Like humans, marine turtles rely primarily on their vision to search for food. However, they are also thought to possess the capacity to see UV light, making their vision quite different from our own.

Besides sight and smell, there are other senses animals use to find food. Many marine animals hunt by echolocati­on, notably toothed whales and dolphins. Echolocati­on is known to be incredibly sensitive, and yet dozens of sperm whales and other toothed whales have been found dead with stomachs full of plastic bags, car parts and other human detritus. Savoca says it’s likely their echolocati­on misidentif­ies these objects as food. “There’s this misconcept­ion that these animals are dumb and just eat plastic because it is around them, but that is not true,” says Savoca. The tragedy is that all these animals are highly accomplish­ed hunters and foragers, possessing senses honed by millennia of evolution to target what is often a very narrow range of prey items. “Plastics have really only been around for a tiny fraction of that time,” says Schuyler. In that time, they have somehow found themselves into the category marked ‘food’. (Courtesy BBC)

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 ??  ?? Plastic looks, smells, feels and even sounds like food
Plastic looks, smells, feels and even sounds like food

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