Sunday, April 14, 2013

POP's art show, non-profit social media, and an unusual ocean pollution solution are on the move

Monteleone's conceptual art "What goes around, comes around"
As the human population begins to make the necessary connections that plastic is interfering with the natural world, more and more people are climbing on board to help educate, motivate, and create solutions to this growing problem.  Why? Because we are problem solvers as much as we are problem creators and that is what separates us from the natural world.  How is The Plastic Ocean Project (POP) making these connections? Through our traveling art show "What Goes Around, Comes Around," by launching our new logo, website and Facebook page, and by sharing ideas like 19-year-old, Boyan Slat, who is working on an invention for possible ocean cleanup.

Much of our U.S. populous is in landlocked areas and do not associate themselves with the problem of plastic ocean debris. Why would they when they are 100s of miles away from the ocean's edge?  But some people in these regions are making the connection that all rivers lead to oceans and that their plastics end up there from runoff.  They understand that we are all contributing to the problem and is why this art show has been  invited inland.   Last month, the POP's art show was at Guilford CollegeGreensboro, NC.  Currently, it is in landlocked Cortland, NY where people from Central NY will have the opportunity to see the plastics that were plucked from the open-ocean and from remote ocean islands thousands of miles away from the mainland.  The exhibit opened 4.4.13 with an open reception at 9 Main Street, Cortland NY at 7pm. Bonnie Monteleone will share her experiences and findings through art.  And next month it will be at 901 Pollock Street Gallery, New Bern on display with "The Gathering."  Our goal is to have it on exhibit at various locations across the U.S. until it reaches California.  (Anyone interested in having the display in their area can contact Bonnie Monteleone at blm@theplasticocean.org.)

Wiggs and Jane Horner
Jane Horner with bottle installation

Another good example of people connecting people is in New Bern - fabulous river town in North Carolina. What started in Blake Wiggs' high school environmental class making art out of plastic bottles spread like gossip to the rest of the community.  The conceptual art, fittingly titled "The Gathering" is in collaboration with artist Jane Horner.  It consists of 1,500 beverage bottles to represent the number of beverage bottles used every SECOND in the US.  The group started meeting on Saturdays in order to finish this project by May 11th for the community Artwalk Festival.  Parents, who were dropping off there children began bringing their scissors, then more and more people from the community showed up to help.  It is a microcosm of the dialog spreading globally about plastic pollution and through art, much like Picasso's art against war - The Banality of Evil, it speaks volumes without saying a word.


Slat's Array prototype
On the social media front, Diana Dehms, Martha Lyons,  Kellie Johansen and Bonnie Monteleone have been teaming up to inspire the masses to join forces with the Plastic Ocean Project, Inc. and be the forerunners in freeing the oceans from the plastic menace.  At the helm is rear Admiral Leedert "Len" Hering, Sr. (U.S. Navy retired) whose conviction is, "If we can go to the moon, we can cleanup the oceans for the next generations."  It will take governments, military leaders, students, innovators, educators, non-profits, and fishermen working together to at least try.  Boyan Slat is one such inventor who designed the Array that scours the surface of the ocean removing plastic fragments.  He has come under scrutiny from other organizations for some of his overarching expectations on a device that hasn't seen the ocean yet and though some of the backlash is right on target, we support anyone putting forth the effort to try.  As the saying goes, "Those who say it cannot be done should not interrupt the people doing it."  Efforts should be made not just from reducing our use of plastic and stopping it from getting out to sea via runoff, but POP goes one step further in supporting the efforts of removing as much as plastic as possible that is already out there.








Sunday, February 24, 2013

UNCW Students Studying Beached Plastics



Emma Belcher entering beach sample data
The UNCW plastic marine debris research that started four years ago in the Sargasso Sea 700 miles off the coast of North Carolina has made its way to the coast of NC.  Over the past couple of semesters, students have been collecting beach samples of manmade materials and natural debris found in the wrack line to compare densities.  They are also learning how to type the plastics using FTIR instrumentation,  and Mass Spectrometry to analyze the plastics for adsorbed Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs).   Dr. Brooks Avery oversees the beach sampling protocol, while Bonnie Monteleone works with students in our new lab space.  Over the past two years we have been nomads stealing space in three different labs, but as of January, we have scored a beautiful lab space in Dobo Hall courtesy of Dr. Seaton. (see images)

Misty Wilbanks shares turtle gastro-juices data with Emma 

Misty Wilbanks, highlighted in the Star News a few weeks ago, is a veteran undergraduate working up the plastics collected from our Sargasso Sea samples. Her Honors project, looking at the potential of POPs transferring from ingested plastics into sea turtle tissue, is especially unique because it requires collaboration with Dr. Pam Seaton from Chemistry, Dr. Amanda Southwood Willard from Biology, and the Virginia Aquarium Stranding Network.  Misty's hands-on experience has been valuable on many levels.  She not only is learning specialized instrumentation and the importance of collaboration, but she has also been able to train other students.

Jaclyn (Jackie) Smith bringing in beach sample into new lab

Jackie sorting out natural debris from manmade

To date, we have had 26 Direct Independent Study opportunities for students.  They learn scientific method in the field as well has how to manage their time.  Processing these samples is not trivial.  Going to the beach to collect samples is the easy part.  Dissecting the samples requires long hours in the lab.  The sample has to be dried, separated (the natural debris from the manmade materials), and weighed.  The students then separate the manmade debris by classification, then each classification weighed and counted.  The multi-dimensional data then needs to be entered into the data base.



Corina Cooling weighing dry sample
Corina Cooling preparing sample to dry

The collection of manmade debris not only is a great scientific educational tool, it also helps keep debris from washing back out into the ocean.  Plastic debris is known to be ingested by marine life as evidenced by the Bull Dolphin fish caught off the coast of Virginia not long ago.  (See photo below)





Fish caught with large plastic fragment, pudding cup and squirt gun in stomach. 

Friday, August 3, 2012

"That is the sickest sample I've seen so far"

In preparation for a talk at the Cape Fear River Watch Saturday August 4th, I came across this footage I shot when sailing across the North Pacific from Hawaii to California in 2009.  We were repeating the same sites Captain Charlie Moore had done in 1999 that led to his publishing scientific paper exposing the 6 to 1 plastics to zooplankton by weight.  That is disturbing enough, yet, our results from the 2009 resample showed that there was twice as much plastic by weight than the 1999 samples.   We had conducted 54 samples using two surface samplers - one for science, the other for educational purposes.  This video was shot over 1000 miles from land and yet illustrates the disgusting contents of plastic found in our educational sampler.  The majority of plastics found are bite size pieces festering at the surface where the base of the fish at the base of the food chain, on up to whales, feed.  I became ill after seeing sample after sample of what looked like pristine waters, reveal a horrible truth, that we have polluted every corner of our planet.

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.
Endangered Platypus killed by plastic ring

Evidence land animals eat plastic
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 
The last student I interviewed while on our  N. Atlantic voyage was Kila Pickering.  Kila attends Princeton University and is also on the swim team.  He's an All American in many ways, check out his bio.  Kila and I talked about the types of research preformed this voyage, from the deep-water casts collecting water 4,700 meters deep for Dr. Michael Gonzior, to retrieving the OFP traps and redeploying them for Dr. Maureen Conte, to collecting surface samples collecting Sargassum, biota, and plastics.  One thing we agreed on, they all took a lot of time.  Sometimes it gets down right boring waiting for the instruments to be released then retrieved again.  Kila is pre-med and we concluded that "Science is time and labor intensive like surgery, but it isn't something you want to rush.  The consequences could be disastrous."  The CTD and OFP instruments weigh thousands of pounds, one wrong move could badly injure someone or at the very least destroy the instrument.  It is not much different than the pressure of being a surgeon.

Preparing sediment traps
When asked what he valued most from the experiences, he said above all, nothing compares to hands on experience.  This cruise allowed him to experience several types of research, from seeing how carbon cycling is sampled from the CTD casts, seeing the sediment collected from the OFP traps, and getting a look at how plastic is found out in the open ocean.  Kila is a mellow guy, not one to get too excited about anything but did share that he was most surprised by the plastics found in the Sargassum where many different species of marine life live.  Kila strongly urges students to try to find these types of opportunities that can never be explained in a textbook.


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
For this year’s cruise, I decided to also focus on the marine biota in the surface-floating weed along with the plastics.  We were able to get quite a collection of living organisms using a 10-gallon fish tank.  Shane and I talked about how we were sometimes fooled by marine life that looks like plastic and, understandably, how easy it would be for their predators to mistake plastic for food.   Marine life like the clear creatures that look like cellophane, crabs with white specks on their bodies, and barnacles that look like plastic fragments to name a few.


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! 


Beautiful Nudibranch the size of a dime
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


Anika on Aft Deck documenting OFP
 Guest post from Anika Aarons
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
PLASTIC RESEARCH We have been performing surface samples morning, noon, and night over the past four days and each of the 13 samples collected have had about a handful of plastics.  It might not sound like much, but when quantifying the plastics collected from a meter-wide trawl that runs for approximately two nautical miles, times the two million square miles of the Sargasso Sea, the handfuls turn into metric tonnes.  These plastic fragments sprinkled over the surface of the ocean reek havoc on marine life.  According to a paper recently published in Marine Pollution Bulletin titled, “Seabirds Study Shows Plastic Pollution Reaching Surprising Levels Off Coast of Pacific Northwest,” 67 of the beached northern Fulmar birds necropsied, 92.5 percent of them had plastic in their stomachs.  In fact, one bird had 454 pieces of plastic in its gut.  Because this type bird only forages for food skimming the surface of the ocean, it is more apt to eat the plastics floating there like the types of plastics we find in our trawl. Not only birds accidentally ingest plastics but marine biota that live in or attracted to the free-floating Sargassum as well.

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.