Scottish Daily Mail

Attenborou­gh: Plastic menace is so bad birds are feeding it to their young

- By Sean Poulter Consumer Affairs Editor

SEABIRDS have started feeding their chicks with scraps of plastic in a shocking example of how polluted the world’s oceans have become, David Attenborou­gh has revealed.

Describing how his team recorded evidence of the problem for his new documentar­y series, the renowned broadcaste­r and naturalist said: ‘Plastics are of crucial importance – it is heartbreak­ing.

‘Which example do you choose as being most heartbreak­ing? I would choose, because I feel so strongly for them, a sequence with the albatross.

‘There is a shot of the young being fed and what comes out of the beak of the adult? Not sand eels, not fish and not squid, which is what they mostly eat, but plastic. It’s heartbreak­ing.’

Sir David was speaking to Greenpeace before the launch of his BBC series Blue Planet II, and the problem has been confirmed by the environmen­tal campaign group.

It has collected images of gannets feeding plastic to their young off the coast of Scotland as well as puffins with scraps of it in their beaks.

Greenpeace released the interview with Sir David to mark the launch of its new investigat­ive and environmen­tal news platform, Unearthed.

During a voyage around the Scottish coast, the group documented plastic pollution in the feeding grounds of basking sharks, in the habitats of puffins, seals and whales, and in the nests and beaks of seabirds.

Its team found plastic bottles, bags and packaging in some of Scotland’s most iconic seabird colonies in areas such as the Bass Rock, Isle of May and the Shiant Isles.

Greenpeace oceans campaigner Louise Edge said: ‘David Attenborou­gh’s words will strike a chord with anyone who has ever witnessed the harm plastic pollution is causing to marine life, whether it’s a turtle tangled up in plastic or a whale’s stomach full of carrier bags.

‘With a truckload of plastic being dumped in our oceans every minute, this has now become a global environmen­tal crisis stretching from the Arctic shores to remote islands in the South Pacific and Britain’s own coastline.

‘Coming from one of the world’s greatest living naturalist­s, Sir David’s words should be a wake-up call for government­s and corporatio­ns that we need real action now to stop plastic waste choking our seas.’

Earlier this month, a study discovered tiny pieces of plastic in sea salt used by cooks in the UK, Europe, the US and China.

Research from the University of Plymouth found more than one in three fish caught by trawler in the English Channel, including cod, haddock and mackerel, contained plastic particles, most likely from their diet.

Some 83 per cent of Norway lobsters caught off the UK coast and sold as scampi contained microplast­ic debris.

Studies at the University of Exeter have also found that the entire food chain of sea creatures – from minuscule zooplankto­n to crustacean­s, mussels, crabs, lobster and fish – has in effect been contaminat­ed by microplast­ics.

The Daily Mail has highlighte­d the dangers to the environmen­t, wildlife and food posed by plastic through campaigns that led to the introducti­on of a 5p charge on plastic bags and a ban on the use of microbeads in beauty products, such as face washes and shower scrubs.

Sir David’s comments come as the Government faces pressure to tackle plastic waste and pollution of the seas, and boost recycling.

Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove has set up a working group to look at a deposit and refund scheme on plastic bottles.

Following a campaign by the Scottish Daily Mail, the Scottish Government has announced that it intends to push ahead with a deposit and refund scheme for plastic bottles and drinks cans.

Even the world’s biggest soft drinks firm, Coca-Cola, has abandoned opposition to the idea and is now promoting it as part of a wider effort to increase the use of recycled plastic in its bottles.

 ??  ?? Despair: An emotional Sir David tells Greenpeace what he saw at sea Right: A puffin with plastic in its beak on the Shiant Isles
Despair: An emotional Sir David tells Greenpeace what he saw at sea Right: A puffin with plastic in its beak on the Shiant Isles

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