The Columbus Dispatch

Once-pristine uninhabite­d beach filled with our garbage

- By Amy B. Wang

Henderson Island, an uninhabite­d atoll in the South Pacific, is so isolated that it’s one of the few places in the world “whose ecology has been practicall­y untouched by a human presence.”

That is, at least, according to its descriptio­n by a United Nations group, which named Henderson Island a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1988.

“The inhospitab­le nature of the island, together with its remoteness and inaccessib­ility, has so far effectivel­y ensured its conservati­on,” UNESCO stated. “As a near-pristine island ecosystem, it is of immense value for science.”

In reality, the remote island has become the final resting place for an estimated 38 million pieces of garbage, according to researcher­s who arrived on its shores in 2015 and were stunned to find the atoll’s once-undisturbe­d whitesand beaches littered with trash. Nearly all of it was made of plastic.

Researcher­s believe that about 3,500 pieces of trash are continuing to wash up there daily, and that Henderson Island now has the highest density of plastic waste in the world, according to a report published Tuesday in the scientific journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

“The quantity of plastic there is truly alarming,” Jennifer Lavers, a co-author the report, told the Associated Press. “It’s both beautiful and terrifying.”

Images provided by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies at the University of Tasmania, where Lavers is a research scientist, show thousands of brightly colored items strewn upon Henderson Island’s sands: water bottles, pieces of netting, plastic helmets, garden containers and other debris so broken down that its original purpose is unrecogniz­able.

The dramatic accumulati­on is the result of human activity from thousands of miles away, the report states. Henderson Island is uninhabite­d and its closest neighbor, Pitcairn Island, lies about 70 miles to the west and is home to only about 40 people. The nearest major population center is more than 3,000 miles away.

However, Henderson Island also happens to be situated on the western edge of a circular system of ocean currents called the South Pacific Gyre, according to the report. Because of its location and the movement of those currents, the island naturally becomes a repository for floating debris from around the world, despite not being home to a single human.

For about three months, researcher­s stayed on Henderson Island in 2015 and analyzed about 55,000 pieces of the garbage, according to Alex Bond, a conservati­on scientist who co-authored the PNAS report with Lavers. Based on identifiab­le markings on about 100 pieces, they determined that garbage had been carried there from China, Japan, South America, Europe, the United States and Russia.

“Plastic is a global problem,” Bond told the Washington Post. “The pieces that we found on Henderson — none of it was from Henderson. . . . So to tackle it we need global cooperatio­n.”

Among the more shocking discoverie­s was an adult female green turtle that had become ensnared in some fishing line and died, he said. There also were crabs that had taken up residence in various plastic containers.

“We are not providing them a home. This is not a benefit to them,” Lavers told the Guardian, of the crabs’ makeshift plastic shelters. “This plastic is old, it’s brittle, it’s sharp, it’s toxic. It was really quite tragic seeing these gorgeous crabs scuttling about, living in our waste.”

Bond said the trash on Henderson Island is indicative of how much plastic debris there might be in the oceans.

“Henderson is just sort of an indicator of what’s floating around out there,” he said. “We talk about islands and marine life being a sort of canary in a coal mine for plastics, but they’ve been the canaries for almost 20 years now and we’re still not getting anywhere.”

Plastic in the oceans can entangle marine mammals and fish, or be ingested by seabirds. It also never degrades, and can float around in the oceans for years or decades. He advises people to think about using plastic alternativ­es — “bamboo toothbrush­es, canvas carrier bags, bringing

a mug to Starbucks” — to cut down on plastic waste.

“When we dispose of plastics, we think it goes away, but there is no ‘away,’ “Bond said. As for the plastic on Henderson Island, it is fated to remain there indefinite­ly.

“Cleaning it up would be a Sisyphean task. It would never end,” he added. “More than 3,500 new items arrive every day. Because Henderson is just so seldomly visited, a beach cleanup for lack of a better phrase is just not feasible.”

A 2015 study found that humans are now putting 8 million metric tons of plastic into the oceans a year. Ocean current systems also have carried floating plastic to other far, formerly untouched corners of the planet: Last month, the Washington Post’s Chris Mooney reported that parts of the Arctic Ocean have become a “dead end for floating plastics.”

“It’s only been about 60 years since we started using plastic industrial­ly, and the usage and the production have been increasing ever since,” Carlos Duarte, director of the Red Sea Research Center at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia, said.

“So, most of the plastic that we have disposed in the ocean is still now in transit to the Arctic.”

 ?? [JENNIFER LAVERS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Plastic is strewn on the beaches of Henderson Island in the South Pacific. Though no humans live on the island, it is filled with trash that has washed up there because of where the island is situated and the ocean currents.
[JENNIFER LAVERS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Plastic is strewn on the beaches of Henderson Island in the South Pacific. Though no humans live on the island, it is filled with trash that has washed up there because of where the island is situated and the ocean currents.
 ??  ??
 ?? [JENNIFER LAVERS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Researcher­s were astonished to find an estimated 38 million pieces of trash on the beaches of Henderson Island, most of it plastic. It came from China, Japan, the United States, Russia, South America and parts of Europe, they said.
[JENNIFER LAVERS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Researcher­s were astonished to find an estimated 38 million pieces of trash on the beaches of Henderson Island, most of it plastic. It came from China, Japan, the United States, Russia, South America and parts of Europe, they said.

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