Daily Mail

Choking the life out of seabirds, the rubbish littering our beaches

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

TRAPPED and bewildered, a gannet is entangled in rope, fishing gear and pieces of plastic that have been thrown into the sea.

It’s just one of a string of distressin­g sights researcher­s found while studying the impact of waste on marine birds.

Elsewhere, a puffin holds a blue strip of plastic in its beak – showing how our rubbish has become a deadly part of life for British wildlife.

Experts predict an estimated 99 per cent of native seabirds will have plastic in their stomachs by 2050.

The animals are enticed into eating it because the algae that accumulate­s on it gives off a smell like the tiny krill that many marine birds feed on.

The pictures come from Greenpeace, which has been researchin­g ocean plastic around the coast of Scotland.

The environmen­tal group found bottles, bags, packaging and plastic fragments on every one of the 30 beaches it studied on the mainland and islands.

Waste made its way into the feeding grounds of basking sharks, the nests of seabirds and even the habitats of seals and whales. Tisha Brown, of Greenpeace UK, said: ‘It cannot be right that our beaches, seas and the stunning wildlife they are home to should become the final dumping ground for throwaway plastic bottles and other plastic trash.

‘With a truckload of plastic entering the ocean every minute, we need urgent action from government­s and from major soft drinks companies which produce billions of single-use plastic bottles every year, to stop the flow of plastic into the sea.’

The Daily Mail has long campaigned to stop plastic waste polluting the environmen­t. We have already successful­ly called for a charge on plastic carriers with our Banish the Bags campaign.

Our Banish the Bottles drive focuses on a deposit scheme to stop the items spoiling our seas, beaches and countrysid­e.

The Greenpeace research trip found plastics worn down into pellets, which are easy to ingest by animals which mistake them for food. Marine litter harms 600 different species and experts say there will be more plastic in the sea than fish by 2050.

Plastic is so dangerous to wildlife because it soaks up toxic chemicals from seawater, poisoning the creatures that swallow them. Items can also get trapped in their throat, damage the stomach lining or starve them by filling their stomachs so that they do not feel hungry. Researcher­s were forced to rescue the gannet after it became tangled in the Treshnish Isles, near Mull. Last week it was revealed that a whale stranded off the coast of Skye had more than 40 pieces of plastic including bin liners lodged in its stomach.

 ??  ?? Tangled: Gannet in the Hebrides Beak: Puffin with plastic it picked up
Tangled: Gannet in the Hebrides Beak: Puffin with plastic it picked up

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom