The feasibility of going out there and cleaning it up is not the best solution. Reducing our use of one- time use plastics is by far the best answer to this ubiquitous problem. By doing so we reduce the production of plastics made out of limited resources, (toxic petroleum and natural gas) that we use once then throw away that will persist in the environment for 100s of years. Solutions like buying locally promoting small business in your community - soap makers, farmers, thrift shops, and hand-craft makers to name a few. When we do this, these business require a lot less packaging. REthink everything you buy. Make a game out of supporting small businesses and encourage them to not use disposible plastics. It beats trying to get a corporation to stop using it and you have a better shot of being heard. Keep the image of this sample in your mind if you need help remembering why it is important. Some good resources if you need some ideas are Danielle Richardet's blog, It Starts With Me and Beth Terry's book, Plastic Free.
This blog shares the research experiences and findings conducted at University of North Carolina Wilmington (UNCW faculty and students) in conjunction with Plastic Ocean Project. Earlier posts share open-ocean sampling and adventures in the North and South Atlantic, the South Pacific and the North Pacific Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Outreach and education is the primary purposes to bring global awareness to an issue that has reached a crisis level in the marine environment.
Friday, August 3, 2012
"That is the sickest sample I've seen so far"
The feasibility of going out there and cleaning it up is not the best solution. Reducing our use of one- time use plastics is by far the best answer to this ubiquitous problem. By doing so we reduce the production of plastics made out of limited resources, (toxic petroleum and natural gas) that we use once then throw away that will persist in the environment for 100s of years. Solutions like buying locally promoting small business in your community - soap makers, farmers, thrift shops, and hand-craft makers to name a few. When we do this, these business require a lot less packaging. REthink everything you buy. Make a game out of supporting small businesses and encourage them to not use disposible plastics. It beats trying to get a corporation to stop using it and you have a better shot of being heard. Keep the image of this sample in your mind if you need help remembering why it is important. Some good resources if you need some ideas are Danielle Richardet's blog, It Starts With Me and Beth Terry's book, Plastic Free.
Monday, July 23, 2012
When the Media Pays Attention-We Have the World's Attention
Art educating science in French mag |
Because of social media, more and more everyday people are becoming aware how we can become better stewards of the earth. It's not like we are being nice as much as it is "getting it," that what we do to the planet we inevitably do to ourselves, our children and grandchildren. Over use of plastics, made from chemicals, gets into our soil, our animals that we eat, and also causes premature death through entanglement and ingestion. As many as 55 different species are negatively impacted by plastic pollution. Extinction rates are on the rise due to pollution and since we need to eat and drink of the same water and foods, we might be on that endangered list some day. But not if we can help it and we can. Through art, science, outreach, education, Texting, blogging, Facebooking, and Tweeting we can educate each other on what works for a sustainable planet and what doesn't.
Plastics are so ubiquitous that it's now invaded the natural world beyond ingestion and entanglement. Birds are using the materials for nests (See video below) and some birds that feed on the water surface actually feed plastics to their chicks. Others, like sea turtles confuse plastic film materials like packaging and bags for food.
Turtle eating plastic became entangled in it. |
These are just a few quick reasons why we need to figure out a different resource other than toxic petroleum and natural gas to make our products. Something that is durable yet doesn't last in the environment for 400-1000 years, especially when we are only using it once.
I'm going to be on the radio today if you want to take a listen. Or, listen to the podcast of the show as soon as it airs July 28th and 29th. It will posted on www.sustainabilitynewsandentertainment.com
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Kila preparing CTD |
Preparing sediment traps |
Kila and Angela Tomasini sort plastic from Sargassum |
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Sea Life Amid Lifeless Plastic
Shane Antonition, a recent Bermuda high school graduate and youngest member of the cruise, is bound for the University of Waterloo, Canada this fall to study Environmental Engineering. Shane had a rough start on our North Atlantic cruise dealing with the rocking and rolling of the ship, partly due to the rough sea state, but according to Shane, it’s also because of the ship’s design. The RV Atlantic Explorer, once a tugboat, was fitted with two more decks causing it to be slightly top heavy. Shane’s engineering mind figured this out early on and given the chance, would reconfigure the weight distribution by using lighter materials, perhaps, making it more fuel-efficient as well. Though I have to admit, I like the rock-n-roll.
Shane said he was aware of plastic in the ocean, especially in the North Pacific gyre, but was not expecting the magnitude of what we found in the North Atlantic gyre. He said, “It [the plastic sampling] was definitely an eye opener. I didn’t realize it would be to that scale. Each of our trawls we only collected small amounts of plastic, but multiply that by the thousands of kilometer of ocean and we’ve got a big problem here.”
biological or cellophane? |
spotted crab compared to plastic |
Pulling young students into research experiences has the adage of bringing the parents in as well. Shane’s mother works for the Bank of Bermuda, and though her bank is a huge financial backer, she has never been on the ship. Because of Shane, she received her first tour hours before we left for the open sea. By bringing parents in, it can come full circle when they provide info useful for research. Shane’s father told us about Sargassum sea slugs. In my many years of looking at Sargassum, I didn’t even know they existed. When Angela Tomasinna had one fall out of some Sargassum she was sorting, we put it in water and it instantly started jammin’ like a rock star. I fell in love with this little creature – who knew slugs could be adorable!
Looking out over the ocean, there is little indication of life other than an occasional flash of a fish, turtle, or marine mammal. But what thrives below the surface is a world of precious species. Some so small, you need a microscope to see, yet, provide every other breath we breathe. But when chemicals, oil, and plastic (a combination of the two) get into this environment, they can destroy the sensitive balance that makes life possible. This last cruise has, more than ever, encouraged me to continue bringing the ocean to those who do not have access. I hope by doing so, people will fall in love with everything from the Sargassum slug on up to the sharks that keep the ocean in harmony. As Jay Nichols once said, “We will protect the things we love.”
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Amazing Pictures from Just Below the Surface of the Sea
The first time I heard about the Oceanic Flux Program (OFP)
was when Dr. Maureen Conte came to give a lecture to my class while I
participated in the Semester in Environmental Science (SES) program in Woods
Hole, MA at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL). The lecture was mostly
about the flux of organic matter in the ocean, from the surface to the deep and
back, and concluded with a brief summary of Maureen’s OFP work in the Sargasso
Sea. I was instantly enthralled and had a burning desire to find out more than
what I had gained in a mere 15 minutes.
Consequently, I emailed Maureen to schedule a meeting to
learn more about her research and get some possible ideas of research projects
I could carry out in my last 5 weeks of the program using techniques similar to
those of her OFP work. In my project, I extracted organic compounds from
particulate organic matter (POM) – suspended particles, such as detritus, in
the water column – and used this information to tell a story about the
communities living in the water column, their environmental conditions and how
they might be shaping it.
When completing my SES research, Maureen invited me to come
work for the OFP program this summer and so here I am in the middle of the
Atlantic getting to experience firsthand the science that hooked and held my
attention in that SES lecture. I feel like I’m coming full circle now from my
own SES project, tying in the basics that I learned to the big picture of long-term
ocean climate changes. My job is trying to figure out what exciting events have
been happening in the big blue Sargasso Sea and I love it. ****************************************************
Plastic in Sargassum |
Argonatus argon octopus |
Last night, we ran a sample that netted 65
cm of Sargassum along with marine
life far different from the day samples. When we dumped the sample into the
sorting tub we noticed two beautiful Nautilus-like shells each connected to a
small octopus among an array of other invertebrates. It is difficult to stay on task plucking
plastics when there are so many creatures we’ve never seen before swimming
around in our sample. The
only way to sort out the plastic fragments is to handpick through all of the
weed. It took five of us over an hour to sort - blurry-eyed by the time we shut the lab lights out at 1am.
Seahorse feeding off bottom of tank |
Tonight the sea state settled down to a series
of gentle ripples and from past experiences when the sea state flattens, more
plastics tend to appear in our samples. True to form, we had a record amount of
plastic than the previous 12 samples.
But that wasn’t all we found, our trawl pulled in an 10 cm
seahorse. We’re giving the credit to
Harry the seahorse whisperer. Now the
trick is to keep it alive so we can return it to the ocean when the ship stops
at 0430 Sunday.
Bill holding seabird on deck |
Tomorrow we will be steaming back to
Bermuda with plenty of stories to share about the ubiquitous plastics we
collected, the amazing Sargassum
fish, the octopi, the seahorse, and a bird that I saw fly into the CTD garage. Bill found it on the floor and gently picked
it up as it came-to. It went from being
confused, to frightened, to relaxing in Bill’s tender touch. We snapped photos, then took it to the bow
where it was dark so it wouldn’t get confused by the lights blaring on the aft
deck. Bill opened his hand slowly as the sea bird composed itself before it sprang
from his hand wings open and flew across the moonlit sky.
This cruise started out with the focus on
plastic pollution and ended with a greater appreciation for the marine life in
the open sea. It made me realize the
delicate balance of life above and below the surface and that it is worth
protecting.
Launching a Million Dollar Ocean Sampling Device
Yesterday we retrieved the sediment traps that have been tethered
to the ocean floor for roughly four
months. This diagram illustrates the
rigging. There are a series of bottles
located under the large yellow funnels.
The bottles are on a timer that advances each of the many empty bottles
to the base of the funnel after a specified period of time. This
is the main reason we are out here. Dr.
Maureen Conte is the primary investigator of the Oceanic Flux Program (OFP)
time-series and has been for over 30 years.
The sediments collected in these traps tell us about the influence of the
ocean surface on the physical and biological processes over time scales of
weeks to decades and how particles flux in the water column. This hydrography
provides unprecedented opportunities to study the biology, chemistry, and ocean
physics especially over a long period of time.
Why is it important? Because this study helps us understand the reprocessing
of these particles, like carbon emissions, ocean acidification, or suspended plastics. The OFP is the longest running open-ocean
research of its kind dating back to 1978 and made possible through funding by
the National Science Foundation (NSF). Thank
you NSF!
Anika Aarons and Angela Tomassina prepare sediment trap. |
Today, we are 75 km SE of Bermuda. We returned the sediment traps to the sea with
fresh bottles. Anika Aarons, a grad
student at Mount Holyoke, assisted Maureen in the process. But it took all deck hands and marine techs
to launch these gigantic sinkable “rubber duckys” that require thousands of pounds
of steel, galvanized line, glass spheres the size of beach balls, and
waterproof instrumentation accompanied by a 2,400 lb. anchor. With all of this
heavy machinery and equipment on the aft deck, hardhats are a necessity. Anika will be ghost-blogging her experience
working on the OFP later today and I will share what we found in our surface sampling late last night.
Friday, July 6, 2012
Harry the Seahorse Whisperer
Harry Masters opening Nikin Bottles |
Harry Masters is here helping Michael Gonzior prepare the Rosette CTD (Conductivity, Temperature, and Depth device) for a 4700 meter cast down
into water that is thousands of years old. Water that will take centuries before it returns to the surface. Michael is
looking at the water disolved organic matter or profile. Like fossils, water has distinct elements
that can provide insight into the past.
In the photo you can see Harry opening up the Niskin bottles on the CTD wrapped around the circular frame like horses on a carousal. The bottles will capture the ancient water. The marine techs and deck
hands will use an electronic winch to lower the CTD until it reaches the
designated depth. The bottles will then
receive a signal to snap shut and the CTD will make its way back to the
surface. The entire process takes
several hours because it travels about 15 meters a minute.
Harry, born and raised in Bermuda, recently graduated from
the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill with a degree in Environmental
Studies and Public Policy with a minor in Entrepreneurship. This is his first open-ocean cruise on a research
vessel and says he is loving every minute of it, from helping with the CTD to
keeping the ever-growing collection of biota alive that we net from our surface
sampling.
Harry has grown particularly fond of a 6 cm Histrio histrio
also called a frogfish or Sargassum
fish. I have come to calling it “King Pin.” Notice how its coloring mimics the Sargassum. Another unique characteristic is the way it can use its fins like hands - grabbing on to the Sargassum as it perches in the weed waiting for food to swim by. We have been able to observe the eating habits of many of the species
due to the Sargassum ecosystem we
have created in our 10-gallon fish tank, for exampe, crabs eat not only the abundant
shrimp found in the Sargassum, but
also eat each other. But they are not
the only ones cannibalistic. Harry was
trying to catch a smaller Histrio histrio for Maureen Conte for the purpose
of studying the lipids in this species.
Harry ended up having to find another one to catch. When the little fish
swam past King Pin it abruptly disappeared like a fly on the tip of a frog’s
tongue. Now we know, Histrio histrio
also eat it’s own kind. Because we have
quite the collection, Harry managed to collect three for Maureen. This has been a particularly good hands-on
experience for the graduate who, toward the end of his undergraduate studies, became
interested in Marine Biology. During the
last few months of college he worked in a lab studying the gene expression in
diatoms under different iron conditions.
Harry and I compared being on this ship like the life
support in the Sargassum ecosystem. Everyone
has a role or purpose. Each supports
each other from the cooks preparing awesome food to the deck hands that make
the science happen, to the captain and crew that get us where we need to be
safely. It is the science that provides
the jobs and it the science that perpetuates better understanding of how we can
be amiable stewards to the sensitive ecosystems we depend upon.
Recently, while hanging out at the beach with some friends, Harry
looked down at something moving in beached Sargassum. It was a 4” seahorse heaving for air. He and his friend worked together to get it
out to the reef. Harry held it gently in
his hand underwater, the seahorse wrapped its tail around his finger, and his
friends towed Harry on his boogie board to the reef. Science works the same way. It begins by opening your eyes to the world
around you and then asking a question like, “What is this?” and then attempting
to find the answer.
Later we will show pictures of the plastic we are finding in our samples as well as the main event, the retreaval of the OFP mooring.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Getting Into It
Students sort plastics from Sargassum |
When we sample the open-ocean for plastics, we often times collect the Sargassum weed as well, and that's because they both can float and are impacted similarly by the same ocean dynamics. So when the ocean is really rough, a lot of the Sargassum gets broken up and washed down into the water column as do the plastics. When there is a convergence zone, the Sargassum will accumulate on the surface and ditto the plastics. Usually this means that when there is a lot of Sargassum, we will find a lot of plastic. But today, we were stumped. Of the three samples we took, only the first one filled our sampling net. The other two had very little weed in them yet both had more plastics than the first.
Angela Tomassini observing Sargassum biota |
Angela Tomassini from Eckard College in St. Petersburg, FL, a visiting student at BIOS. She is a Marine Science major with a concentration in Biology, minoring in Environmental Studies and Spanish. She chose to give up a birding trip she had planned in order to take this cruise to work with scientists. She said she didn't expect to have the opportunity to observe marine biology since most of the science research on this cruise leans toward chemistry. She was pleasantly surprised because it isn't just the weed and plastics that we find. A myriad of marine life lives in the weed. Thanks to JP Skinner, BIOS, who provided us with a fish tank, we could save some of the marine biota that ends up in our samples. By doing so, we were able to illustrate to the students the complexity of the Sargassum ecosystem that provides food for larger fish, birds, and sea turtles. Angela recommends students take up any opportunity to participate in hands-on experiences. She learned so much and it's only the first day! But she does have one question and we're hoping someone respond to this blog, "Are the blue copepods bio luminescent?
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Bermuda Brings Science, Students, and Sargassum Together
I arrived at Bermuda Institute
of Ocean Sciences (BIOS) campus Sunday afternoon with two trunks of
research supplies, a backpack full of camera gear, and a small bag of
clothing. Thankfully, fashion is not a
requirement. We, Michael Gonsior, Bill Cooper, and I, found Maureen
Conte sitting on the BIOS campus porch overlooking the inlet where the RV Atlantic Explorer wades in the bright teal Bermudian waters. The stately BIOS facility has been housing
ocean researchers since 1903. Dr. Conte
is the lead scientist for the Ocean Flux Program (OFP), among the longest running
research in the open-ocean and it’s because of her sharing precious ship-time we are able to do our third year of open-ocean sampling for plastic
in the North Atlantic gyre.
Monday we spent most of the day loading the ship with tons,
literally, tons of instruments, lines, wires, buoys, and hardware that is
necessary for the collection of sediment OFP seeks 3,500 meters deep. When we were not loading the ship, we were
preparing the manta trawl we use to do our surface sampling. We had plenty of hands to help. Maureen recruited one grad student, three undergrads, and one high school student to join in the five-day cruise. Two of the students are from Bermuda, a rare
opportunity for local students, in hopes to foster more local participation in the future. I will be posting interviews with the
students while out at sea. You'll hear firsthand about their open-ocean science experiences - lookout prime time "Reality TV."
Aerial photo of Sargassum mat by Erin Cummings |
Why all the camera gear?
Not only will I be interviewing the crew about the OFP and other types of research happening on this voyage, but we also hope to
record Sargassum Natans unique to the
Sargasso Sea, another area of interest for our plastic debris research. Sargassum
has it’s own ecosystem that we hope to film and photograph to illustrate the
life that lives in the Sargassum along
with plastic we find in it. Plastics in
the ocean have proven to cause both entanglement and ingestion issues.
Last month, Jason Andre, Sarah Malette, Julian Kehaya went
for a three-day cruise with Captain Abram Lamertson and first mate Carolina
Priester to videotape and photograph what lurks underneath the Sargassum 50 miles off North Carolina’s
coast. What we anticipated to find were fish
that seek out the weed for cover and for food.
We found fish, but what we didn’t anticipate finding was the amount of
plastic in the water column below
the Sargassum. In my years of researching marine plastics
and the way it accumulates in Sargassum,
I expected to find plastic intermingled in the weed lines known as windrows. What
we found was the same ocean dynamics that caused the windrows of Sargassum to form on the surface also caused plastics to converge throughout the water column below the Sargassum. Here is just a rough video of
what Jason videotaped. http://vimeo.com/44794520
The significants of this footage is quantity of plastic film-like plastic such as food wraps and plastic bags parts, which look like one of sea turtles favorite foods, jellyfish. Sargassum is where sea turtles go to feed. Yikes!
Join the journey as I will be posting live from Sargasso Sea daily.
The significants of this footage is quantity of plastic film-like plastic such as food wraps and plastic bags parts, which look like one of sea turtles favorite foods, jellyfish. Sargassum is where sea turtles go to feed. Yikes!
Join the journey as I will be posting live from Sargasso Sea daily.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Studying Sargassum and Plastic off the North Carolina Coast
Sargassum, a free-floating brown algae found in the North Atlantic, acts like a dust mop as it collects plastics that float in the open ocean. Such plastic can have a negative impact on marine life that depend upon the Sargassum. I grew interested in this the first surface sample we pulled onto the RV Atlantic Explorer in 2009. The collection devise was not only full of Sargassum and plastic, but it also contained an abundance of marine life - an ecosystem of species that live in the seaweed like crabs, seahorses, historia-historia fish, shrimp, barnacles, and an array of pelagic fish that are attracted to it. From that moment on I have been wanting to take a research team, sampling kits, video and camera equipment off the coast of North Carolina and get into a weed line. It has been four years and next week, the study commences. With videographer Jason Andre, boat captain Abram Lambertson, and two marine biology students, we will be pursuing a weed line much like what you see in this picture. The other beautiful part about this research is the potential of filming marine mammals that are attracted to it as well.
We will be working our way up the coast from Wilmington to Beaufort then head out to sea approximately 50 miles in search of water temperature changes that create convergence zones and form the weed lines of Sargassum. We will then record the plastic debris we find in the algae as well as the marine life that is associated with the weed line and possibly record interaction between marine life and plastic.
This cruise is the first of a series of four that we hope to complete this summer. We are looking for people who want to volunteer their boat time. We will fund the fuel. This research is the first of its kind specifically studying plastic, Sargassum, and the marine life it harbors which attracts juvenile sea turtles, sport fish, dolphins, and other marine mammals that maybe either ingesting or getting entangled in the plastic contaminants. If interested in helping in anyway, please contact monteleoneb@uncw.edu.
preparing the sampling device in Fiji |
This cruise is the first of a series of four that we hope to complete this summer. We are looking for people who want to volunteer their boat time. We will fund the fuel. This research is the first of its kind specifically studying plastic, Sargassum, and the marine life it harbors which attracts juvenile sea turtles, sport fish, dolphins, and other marine mammals that maybe either ingesting or getting entangled in the plastic contaminants. If interested in helping in anyway, please contact monteleoneb@uncw.edu.
Farwell Fiji
I have been struggling for weeks to write this post. I cannot explain it. I know I needed to, but there is just so much to say. Weird stuff like, feeling totally removed from a simple existence. Even though I try, I can't come close. Our fast- paced/instant gratification/convenient society seems light years apart from the more carefree/relaxed/jovial people of Fiji. Now you know why I've been struggling. The people and places we visited were like no other I have experienced in other parts of the world. The poorer communities in South Africa struggled for food and water yet were imbued in plastic trash. In Fiji, that is not the case.
Loading and unloading 50 bags and boxes of personal items, scuba and camera gear on vans, boats, taxis, and ferries was the hardest part of being in Fiji. We visited six locations in 15 days, Suva, Salea Village, Kioa Island, Taviuni, Suva Suva, and Wailani LaLa. Every beach I studied nearly devoid of the plastic fragments, wrappers, soda bottles, cigarette butts, and Styrofoam. Not that there weren't any plastics, but nothing like what I witnessed in Hawaii, Bermuda, Brazil, Cape Town South Africa, or Wrightsville Beach, NC. In fact, for the most part shoes were optional, even adult teams when playing rugby. People walked most everywhere and when they did, seldom was anyone carrying plastic beverage bottles, or Styrofoam cups of coffee, eating packaged food, or smoking. It was like taking a giant step back in time. Back before our over use of one-time use plastic single serving everything. And the results of being a society still relatively plastic-free bared witness on their beaches. Even our surface sampler revealed very little plastic. That said, all seven of our samples still contained plastics but from god knows where.
Manta trawl deployed surface sampling |
My cabin door starboard side |
From my cabin door I looked out and watched as we glided past island after island with communities tucked in the matrix of greenery. The people of Fiji harmoniously amid the jungle of trees, bamboo, and mossy grasses. No TVs, no radios blaring. Children playing outdoors everywhere.
It gave me hope that maybe, just maybe, the Fijians can bypass the use of plastic throw away everything and figure out a way to use their abundance of bamboo to make their packaging. In fact, while I was there, I shared with several of them my "to-go" utensils made out of bamboo and encouraged them to find alternatives for plastics by using the multi-faceted bamboo. And by doing so they can avoid the use of natural resources like gas, coal, and petroleum, and not have to deal with the plastic stuff that doesn't biodegrade. Their streets would not be lined with plastics that will eventually wash out to sea. I told them by doing so they will enjoy their pristine environment a lot longer than we have. It was like I came from the future to tell them "don't do as we have done." I know that the odds are stacked up against such change, but I can hope, can't I?
Monday, March 19, 2012
Hanging out at the Beach
Most people think of going to the beach to enjoy some R and R. But I haven't stopped yet. Here are some beach sampling photos. These samples attempt to quantify how much plastic is found in the rack line on beaches. This day I was sampling Silia Beach. The first photo is of the rack line where debris has been washed in, both natural debris (seaweed, sticks, and leaves) and man-made materials. Some of the plastics are in whole pieces like the bottle cap, others are broken pieces of plastics and torn polystyrene. I take two samples, one with a visibly high concentration of plastics and another that appears to have none. I do a series of these and then average out the plastics by weight and the distance of the beach front sampled. It serves as baseline data to compare with future samples.
It's important that we understand how plastic is entering our oceans so we can someday figure out how to stop it. Most of us would assume it comes from cruise ships, cargo ships, and recreational boaters. Though that is part of it, what we are finding is that it comes from land locked areas as well as what people leave on the beach.
Plastics that end up on the ground can eventually be blown or washed into storm drains and waterways then flushed out to sea. Some of it washes back up on beaches, others head to the open ocean where there is plenty of sunlight to make it brittle, eventually breaking up into smaller pieces. Think of the millions of tiny pieces one plastic bottle can become. We find these types of fragments in our open surface sampler and we find them on beaches, especially island beaches. When I am taking beach samples inevitably, someone will come over and ask me what I am doing. On this day it was two Fijian children 6-7 years old. They were inquisitive and giggly as I showed them what I found and explained why it is a problem. The hope is they will start questioning why plastic is on their beach especially when they use so little plastic compared to what the modern world is using.
This is a village that still drinks from coconuts and the main food is fish they catch and crops they can grow evidenced by the generous meal the Selia Village put on for us. Here is Michael Pitts (sorry for the bad shot Michael) drinking from a coconut one each prepared for our crew. We sat on the floor having dinner in their community hall with the local leaders. Notice the walls lined with fabric and ornamentation that is symbolic to their culture.
Below is one of the fishing outriggers they still use today. The night we left I watched a man getting ready to go fishing in this outrigger. He lit an oil lamp then gently pushed off into the darkening waters. It was only 6:30pm. I was surprised to learn that because we are so close to the equator, the days do not get longer and shorter like it does back home when the seasons change. It only varies by minutes. I wonder if it has anything to do with the even temperament of the people that live here.
It's important that we understand how plastic is entering our oceans so we can someday figure out how to stop it. Most of us would assume it comes from cruise ships, cargo ships, and recreational boaters. Though that is part of it, what we are finding is that it comes from land locked areas as well as what people leave on the beach.
Plastics that end up on the ground can eventually be blown or washed into storm drains and waterways then flushed out to sea. Some of it washes back up on beaches, others head to the open ocean where there is plenty of sunlight to make it brittle, eventually breaking up into smaller pieces. Think of the millions of tiny pieces one plastic bottle can become. We find these types of fragments in our open surface sampler and we find them on beaches, especially island beaches. When I am taking beach samples inevitably, someone will come over and ask me what I am doing. On this day it was two Fijian children 6-7 years old. They were inquisitive and giggly as I showed them what I found and explained why it is a problem. The hope is they will start questioning why plastic is on their beach especially when they use so little plastic compared to what the modern world is using.
This is a village that still drinks from coconuts and the main food is fish they catch and crops they can grow evidenced by the generous meal the Selia Village put on for us. Here is Michael Pitts (sorry for the bad shot Michael) drinking from a coconut one each prepared for our crew. We sat on the floor having dinner in their community hall with the local leaders. Notice the walls lined with fabric and ornamentation that is symbolic to their culture.
Below is one of the fishing outriggers they still use today. The night we left I watched a man getting ready to go fishing in this outrigger. He lit an oil lamp then gently pushed off into the darkening waters. It was only 6:30pm. I was surprised to learn that because we are so close to the equator, the days do not get longer and shorter like it does back home when the seasons change. It only varies by minutes. I wonder if it has anything to do with the even temperament of the people that live here.
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Dive, Dove, Dived
We've been having fun learning the Fijian language and discussing American and British use of the English language. Spelling has never been my forte and it didn't go unnoticed that I wrote dove instead of dived either. The laughter continued discussing how Americans can truly mess with the "English" language starting with A for aluminum. But it's all in great fun and we've had a lot of it combined with a rigorous schedule. The stories we are gathering while in Fiji are compelling. Issues I have not come across in my research will be highlighted in this film and worth watching on the big screen. I have been studying this issue of plastic in the marine environment for over four years now and I cannot believe the evidence we are racking up here.
We've been doing a lot of diving as well. This image is from what they call the "Fish Factory." So many different fish, so many FISH. I came here as a skittish diver, but with all the diving I've been doing, I'll leave with some new skills thanks to Craig Leeson and Michael Pitts. Check out his link, it's amazing footage of plastic entanglement. Got to run, but will share how I ended up working with Michael and Craig in an underwater scuba filming session.
We've been doing a lot of diving as well. This image is from what they call the "Fish Factory." So many different fish, so many FISH. I came here as a skittish diver, but with all the diving I've been doing, I'll leave with some new skills thanks to Craig Leeson and Michael Pitts. Check out his link, it's amazing footage of plastic entanglement. Got to run, but will share how I ended up working with Michael and Craig in an underwater scuba filming session.
Saturday, March 10, 2012
Fiji Water Not in a Bottle
Chief Paul waiting for Emma Roben's to come on down. |
Dinner was served at a table that seats 18 with cloth napkins and waitstaff. I sat at a table of well-known videographers, producers, and TV personalities with the calm blue seas gently cradling our fun ship surrounded by massive volcano rocks. I tried playing it cool like the others sitting at the table who have often been in the presence of much natural beauty. But truthfully, I was busting at the seams.
We later take the rafts back to land, travel another hour down a dirt road passing waving pedestrians as we go. We hike 20 minutes with camera equipment and bathing suits to get some B roll for the film.
Did I jump from the rig under the crystal clear Fiji waterfall? More surprising did the co-producer, Jo Ruxton? You bet we did.
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Awe Fiji - What a Very Different World
Let's start with Internet. I have been living without it which is both good and bad. Bad because I cannot get to share my experiences, good in that I woefully recognize my dependence. The dependency is nearly as difficult to avoid as plastic. In our immediate interactions with the people they seem poor in aesthetics, but rich in community. They laugh easily, help transport each other the old fashion way, hitchhiking. The land is lush with green everything against the backdrop of sharp angular volcano rock mountains. Breathtaking. The terrain is thick with plant life concealing small clusters of make ship huts sporadically dispersed along the narrow road side. Thatched roofs are not uncommon atop wood square huts with glassless windows. You can look through these homes and see the air moving through them. Fresh air conditioning. A simple life void of Internet for most.
We motor along on our four hour journey in a beat-up van on roads with barely enough room for two passing cars. As we drive along in the morning hours, I see people sitting on their porches, on the side of the road, and at spars supplied vegetable stands. I envy the time they have to think. An activity I seldom get to experience these days. On auto pilot, I flip from one demanding concern to the next, not having time to just simply think. Somewhere between these two worlds there is a balance I would love to find.
This imbalance extends from our personal lives to what we take from the planet and then dispose of. Petroleum taken from the ground is now floating on our waters in both oil spills and plastic. Both upset the balance in nature. This is part of why we are here in Fiji, but also to find out what the locals are doing with their plastics when they do not have the infrastructure to dispose of it. For example, though we have bins in our rooms for recycling, they do not recycle here on the island. So where does it go? We have learned what the poor people in this region are doing with plastics that is upsetting the balance of nature on another level. And it affects all of us. To learn more about this you will have to wait until the movie comes out in the spring of 2013.
I also wanted to share with you our experience trying to get through customs, I heard my name over the loud speaker. David Jones, John McIntyre from the BBC News, and I headed over to the security check. As we waited we watched bags being opened to reveal smuggled dried fish, bags full products that might be for resale, and various other contents being confiscated. They then start with John who rubs his hand through his thick seasoned hair as he explains why we have 10 different types of cameras in our possession. I open my bag to explain why I have glass bottles and parts to our surface sampling device in my possession. After about an hour we pack up our goods and are on our way. It was a four hour drive from Nadi airport to Suva. Upon arriving, I met Tonya Streeter, a world class free diver and who is a co-narrator of the film project.
Today we are packing up to take a ferry on into the night to catch our mother ship that will take us out to sea for 10 days. There we will swim with manta rays, film interviews on board, and video our manta trawl as it samples the surface for micro plastics in the strata layer of the sea.
Due to poor Internet connections, this may be my last post over the next ten days.
We motor along on our four hour journey in a beat-up van on roads with barely enough room for two passing cars. As we drive along in the morning hours, I see people sitting on their porches, on the side of the road, and at spars supplied vegetable stands. I envy the time they have to think. An activity I seldom get to experience these days. On auto pilot, I flip from one demanding concern to the next, not having time to just simply think. Somewhere between these two worlds there is a balance I would love to find.
This imbalance extends from our personal lives to what we take from the planet and then dispose of. Petroleum taken from the ground is now floating on our waters in both oil spills and plastic. Both upset the balance in nature. This is part of why we are here in Fiji, but also to find out what the locals are doing with their plastics when they do not have the infrastructure to dispose of it. For example, though we have bins in our rooms for recycling, they do not recycle here on the island. So where does it go? We have learned what the poor people in this region are doing with plastics that is upsetting the balance of nature on another level. And it affects all of us. To learn more about this you will have to wait until the movie comes out in the spring of 2013.
I also wanted to share with you our experience trying to get through customs, I heard my name over the loud speaker. David Jones, John McIntyre from the BBC News, and I headed over to the security check. As we waited we watched bags being opened to reveal smuggled dried fish, bags full products that might be for resale, and various other contents being confiscated. They then start with John who rubs his hand through his thick seasoned hair as he explains why we have 10 different types of cameras in our possession. I open my bag to explain why I have glass bottles and parts to our surface sampling device in my possession. After about an hour we pack up our goods and are on our way. It was a four hour drive from Nadi airport to Suva. Upon arriving, I met Tonya Streeter, a world class free diver and who is a co-narrator of the film project.
Today we are packing up to take a ferry on into the night to catch our mother ship that will take us out to sea for 10 days. There we will swim with manta rays, film interviews on board, and video our manta trawl as it samples the surface for micro plastics in the strata layer of the sea.
Due to poor Internet connections, this may be my last post over the next ten days.
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