Dayton Daily News

More than 1,000 pieces of plastic discovered in whale

- Daniel Victor ©2018 The New York Times

More than 1,000 assorted pieces of plastic, including 115 cups, 25 bags, four bottles and two flip-flops, have been found inside a dead sperm whale in Indonesia, according to local officials.

The whale, found washed ashore Monday in Wakatobi National Park, was already decomposin­g when rescuers arrived, so investigat­ors were unable to determine if the plastic caused its death, said Lukas Adhyakso, the conservati­on director of the World Wildlife Fund in Indonesia. The plastic weighed about 6 kilograms, or 13 pounds, he said.

But images of the dead whale resonated in Indonesia, a country that has started to reckon with its outsize use of plastics. Indonesia, a nation of about 260 million people spread over thousands of islands in Southeast Asia, was the world’s second-biggest producer of plastic waste in 2015, behind only China, according to a study in the journal Science.

Ingesting plastic can give whales a false sense of satiation, leading them to eat less food that provides the nutrients they need, said Nicholas Mallos, director of the Trash Free Seas program at Ocean Conservanc­y, an environmen­tal nonprofit. Consumptio­n of plastics can lead to reduced weight, energy and swimming speed, making whales more vulnerable to predators.

More than 800 species of marine animals are susceptibl­e to the estimated 8.8 million tons of plastics deposited each year in the ocean, Mallos said, and often in ways that do not lead to graphic imagery like the whale in Indonesia. Plastics can entangle and trap animals, sometimes causing them to drown, or pierce elements of their digestive systems after being swallowed.

“What is concerning is that the likelihood of these types of interactio­ns, and these types of horrific encounters between marine organisms and plastic debris, is only likely to continue unless some drastic measures are taken,” Mallos said.

In 2010, the top six plastic waste producers were in or near Southeast Asia: China, Indonesia, the Philippine­s, Vietnam, Sri Lanka and Thailand. Much of the waste comes in the form of single-use items that do not decompose like bags, food packaging, straws and cutlery. The European Parliament voted to ban such items in October, with the ban taking effect in 2021.

While Indonesia outpaces much of the world in plastic use, there are efforts underway to curb it. The country has set a goal of reducing plastic waste by 70 percent by 2025, setting aside $1 billion per year to combat the problem. In one effort to increase recycling, residents of Surabaya, the country’s second-largest city, can pay their bus fare by recycling 10 plastic cups or up to five plastic bottles.

A patchwork of laws in U.S. cities has encouraged consumers to give up disposable items like plastic straws and bags, and some companies have pledged to limit their availabili­ty. But disposable plastics remain a staggering worldwide challenge.

In June, a dead whale found in Thailand had nearly 18 pounds of plastics in its stomach.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States