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As I laid in my berth (bunk) rocking side-to-side
listening to the haunting whisper of howling winds while water swished against
the steel wall that separated my sheets from the salty sea, I recall the
spectacular marine life display many of us witnessed yesterday of Humpback whales surfacing near the Dominican Republic.
We squealed
at the sight of a mother and calf surfacing in tandem - so symbolic of this
crew with three sets of mother and daughters. But the best was watching the
juvenile whale breach seven times as if she equally enjoyed our visit.
Jen Palmer, who was a member of the Voyage of the Sea
Odyssey crew, shared so many details on these and other whale species that we will be making
a short film for educators to use.
One
of the most significant details Jen provided related directly to our work -
Humpbacks are baleen whales meaning the are filter feeders.
They do not have teeth and feed on the small
animals in the ocean such as plankton.
Sadly they feed toward the surface, the very place we find plastic
debris.
In fact, this cruise had been
the first time we pulled out and/or documented more plastic bags than anything
else in our marine debris study.
Plastic
bags have a mandatory advisory printed on plastic bags stating that they should be
kept away from children.
Yet, this juvenile whale’s mother will not
have the option of keeping them away from her calf.
Plastic pollution is known to be lethal to
most marine species including these mega ton creatures.
So you can imagine how delighted we were to
hear from Jim Ries, executive director for One More Generation, that Georgia has passed Georgia's 1st bag ordinance. More and more communities are stepping up and taking action on behalf of our marine and terrestrial animals. This map provides a global view of these ordinances that will help reduce plastic ingestion and entanglement.
http://www.factorydirectpromos.com/plastic-bag-bans
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During our research cruise, we had 12-year-old Olivia Ries, one of the founders of
OMG (One More Generation) gave us her teacher training that she provides schools on how to engage students in plastic education. You heard me right, a 12-year-old schooling adults on plastics. She even taught me a thing or two. Beautiful Nation Project videotaped her session so that they can be used as Peer-to-Peer online education for schools that are signed up with their curriculum, if you haven't signed your children, school, or after school program up yet, take advantage of this opportunity. It is free and fun learning for all ages.
www.beautifulnationproject.org
Plastic Ocean Project, Inc. completed its 7
th
aquatic region of sampling that night. We
have sampled through the North Pacific with Algalita Marine Research
Foundation, 5 years of sampling the North Atlantic with Bermuda Institute of
Ocean Sciences, South Atlantic with 5 Gyres Institute, South Pacific with the film crew
from the upcoming film
Plastic Oceans
with producer Jo Ruxton, Pyramid Lake with the Native American Paiute Tribe in
Nevada, and this week amid the British Virgin Islands, and International waters
around the Dominican Republic with
Beautiful Nation Project, One MoreGeneration, and
Pangaea Explorations.
Why would we bore you with the rambling of names? It’s to illustrate how
many impassioned groups out there willing to pool their funds to perform
research, outreach, and education to schools and sea lovers.
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Sorting samples Cayley, Pangaea, Tricia, POP, Inc., and Shannon, BNP |