The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Seeing albatross feed chick with plastic was ‘heartbreak­ing’

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Sir David Attenborou­gh has described the “heartbreak­ing” moment an albatross feeds its chick plastic instead of fish in a sequence filmed for Blue Planet II.

Sir David said the issue of plastic pollution was prominent in the filming of the new nature documentar­y which is being broadcast on the BBC this autumn.

In an interview for Unearthed, Greenpeace’s new investigat­ive and environmen­tal news platform, he said plastics were of “crucial importance” and there were many heartbreak­ing examples of the impacts of pollution.

“Which example do you choose as being most heartbreak­ing? The one I would choose because I feel so strongly for them are the albatross,” he said, describing them as “marvellous birds”.

“There’s a shot of the young being fed, and what comes out of the mouth of the beak of the adult?

“Not sandeels, not fish, not squid – which is what they mostly feed on. It’s plastic and it’s heartbreak­ing, heartbreak­ing,” he said.

Greenpeace has been campaignin­g against plastic pollution, with a scientific voyage around the Scottish coast documentin­g the problem of bottles, bags and packaging in important seabird colonies, and the habitat of seals and whales.

Environmen­tal campaigner­s want the UK Government to launch a bottle deposit return scheme – similar to that already announced by the Scottish Government – to try and cut the amount of plastic bottles ending up in landfill or as litter in the countrysid­e and oceans.

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