The Palm Beach Post

NORTH PALM: CITIZEN SCIENTISTS CLEAR BEACH

Project encourages visitors to pick up debris along beach.

- By Sarah Peters Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

NORTH PALM BEACH — In the first three days of a hands-on “citizen science” project, MacArthur Beach State Park visitors picked up more than 16½ pounds of trash that was cluttering up the ocean.

Here’s how it works: Park guests grab a bucket and gloves from the nature center and head to the beach, where they pick up the bits of bottles and cans, plastic bags and fishing line littering the shore.

When they’re finished, they bring the bucket back to the nature center and weigh the trash they’ve collected. The park will share the data with the Solid Waste Authority, National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and The Ocean Conservanc­y.

All of that trash is a hazard to marine life such as turtles, wading birds and fish. Sea turtles often mistake balloons and plastic bags for jellyfish, and turtle hatchlings swallow tiny plastic shards. The plastic waste blocks their digestive tracts, which can lead to starvation and death.

All of the dead or nearly dead hatchlings brought to the Loggerhead Marinelife Center in Juno Beach last year had plastic in their guts.

And there’s a good chance the plastic fish swallow could end up inside of people who eat the fish, Director of Education Veronica Frehm said.

The push to pick up plastics and other marine debris at MacArthur comes as Jupiter considers banning restaurant­s from automatica­lly handing out plastic straws.

“All of the education is bubbling up to the surface. People are starting to realize how their actions are making a difference,” Frehm said.

The park does similar programs with the students who visit on school field trips, but the staff wanted to involve visitors of all ages. The program is made possible with the help of a grant from the Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties.

Many people who visit the park already have some knowledge of

the problem, Frehm said. But even educators who did a field test of the project were surprised by a sign at the park displaying plastic items such as cigarettes that last for hundreds of years.

The new citizen science project also comes amid growing awareness of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch halfway between California and Hawaii. The patch full of plastic straws, bags, water bottles and other debris is estimated to be twice the size of Texas. It’s featured on one of MacArthur’s signs about the new citizen science project.

The park does get a little bit of debris from visitors, but most of the litter — bottles, bags, flip flops and even toothbrush­es — is washing up. Volunteers have even found a snack bag with Japanese writing on it and a chip bag from Singapore, Frehm said.

“The animals that live in our waters and on our beach depend on healthy ecosystems. They depend on us to be responsibl­e stewards,” she said.

If each visitor picked up one item, 162,500 pieces of trash would leave the beach each year, Friends of MacArthur Beach State Park Executive Director Cheryl Houghtelin said.

The park is hoping to continue the program in perpetuity.

“I can’t see this as a problem that’s going to go away quickly,” Houghtelin said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? MacArthur Beach State Park visitors picked up more than 16½ pounds of trash in the first three days of the project.
CONTRIBUTE­D MacArthur Beach State Park visitors picked up more than 16½ pounds of trash in the first three days of the project.

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