By Stiv Wilson, posted January 17, 2013 on 5gyres.org |
January 17th, 2013 - LOS ANGELES, CA. Scientists
from The 5 Gyres Institute have discovered the first evidence of a
“garbage patch”, an accumulation zone of plastic pollution floating in
the South Pacific subtropical gyre. The new study, published in the
journal Marine Pollution Bulletin (http://bit.ly/V8tWuC) marks the first
documentation of a defined oceanic garbage patch in the Southern
Hemisphere, where little research on marine plastic pollution exists.
In
March-April 2011, a team of scientists and interested citizens lead by 5
Gyres Institute Executive Director, Dr. Marcus Eriksen, conducted the
first ever sampling of the South Pacific Subtropical Gyre for marine
plastic pollution. The expedition began collecting samples of the ocean
surface near Robinson Crusoe Island, Chile.
Samples
were collected every 50 nautical miles westward to Easter Island, then
onward to Pitcairn Island, totaling 48 samples along a 2424 nautical
mile straight-line transect. Eriksen selected the route based on an
ocean current model developed by Nikolai Maximenko (University of
Hawaii, Honolulu) that predicts accumulation zones for floating debris.
The research team recorded increased density of plastic pollution with
an average of 26,898 particles per square kilometer, and a high of
396,342 km/m2 in the center of the predicted accumulation zone. This
confirms the existence of yet another oceanic 'garbage patch.’
Says Dr. Eriksen, "The
5 Gyres Institute was conceived to create baseline data in all the
world's oceans, to determine whether plastic pollution is pervasive in
all the major gyres of the world. Without a doubt, we have discovered a
previously unknown garbage patch in the South Pacific Subtropical Gyre."
As
Eriksen suspected, at the inception of 5 Gyres, plastic pollution isn't
just a North Pacific phenomenon but rather a global problem with global
implications for fisheries, tourism, marine ecosystems and human
health. In recent years, 5 Gyres has emerged as preeminent force for
gathering marine plastic pollution data and taking that evidence from
scientific publications to media, concerned citizens, policy makers, and
stakeholders. The 5 Gyres Institute is also working on scientific
papers documenting the abundance of marine plastic pollution in all five
subtropical gyres, and results of the recent expedition and discovery
of micro-plastics in the Great Lakes.
Says Eriksen, "To
create a solution to an ecosystem-wide problem we must understand the
scope and magnitude of that problem. It's our (5 Gyres) mission to be on
the frontlines of that understanding, and to continue monitoring the
most remote regions of the world's oceans."
Part
of the 5 Gyres Institute mission is to pair stakeholders and concerned
citizens with scientists on expeditions in order to communicate their
findings beyond the traditional academic circles. This expedition was
conducted aboard the Sea Dragon, a 72ft sailing vessel equipped with 8
available seats for guest crew, which included other scientists,
educators, journalists and filmmakers. By empowering and educating
concerned stakeholders at sea, armed with firsthand, empirical knowledge
of the issue, the problems posed by marine plastic pollution will be
elevated to a global discourse about ending the flow of plastics into
the world's oceans.
"Creating
a balance between peer reviewed science, education and advocacy is a
delicate endeavor, but it's our goal to see common sense policy based on
objective, scientific fact, and to us, if our advocacy efforts are
based on hard evidence, there exists no conflict of interest. Facts are
facts," says Anna Cummins 5 Gyres cofounder.
In
2013 the 5 Gyres Institute will launch three expeditions to the North
Atlantic, Indian Ocean and Great Lakes. These continued expeditions will
provide additional insight to the scope of the problem worldwide, in
the South Pacific and beyond.
FOR MEDIA INQUIRIES CONTACT:
Stiv Wilson
Communications Director
The 5 Gyres Institute
(+1) 503.913.7391
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