Posted by: Bonnie
Captain Charlie Moore defended our oceans on Comedy Central and won. Great job Charlie. Thank you Stephen Colbert for letting Charlie loose!
Date Posted: January 10, 2010 @ 2:19 pm Comments (1)
Posted by: Anna Cummins
I dumped all of the air from by BC and sank like a rock 70ft to the sandy seafloor, before me a living wall of corals and tropical fish. Annaâs sporting her new matching light blue fins, mask and snorkel. Every crack and crevice hides something living. The colors are spectacular and meaningful to the critter that wears them, either hiding, warning or for pure persuasion to fight or frolic. I look up at the trickle of light permitting me to see things mostly in hues of blue. âBut what did this reef look like years ago?â Seasoned divers say itâs now covered with algae and nothing like it was 30 years ago. Yet my baseline is now, and itâs beautiful. So whatâs missing? And does it matter?
Weâre on St. Thomas in the Virgin Islands awaiting our window of departure for the first transatlantic expedition to study plastic pollution in the Sargasso Sea. There are unending little chores to prepare the Sea Dragon, a 72ft sailboat, one of 12 in the Challenge Series. Weâve made time for diving and a visit to the landfill. Approaching the hill we begin to see the manmade slopes littered with cars and tires at the base. This is where Anna and I meet Boogie. Heâs been working here more than a decade.
Boogie explains that goods are imported and nothing has left, until now. âThere have been cars dumped here since I was born, over 100,000 of them. They weâre all here,â he says pointing to a field nearby where he says they were stacked 50ft. high. âPeople donât pay attention to where these things, all things, go. We finally found a way to recover the steel and sell it. It took an economic incentive to clean the mess, and it will take one to stop more.â But for every car there are four tires.
We drive over one hill and see a black valley. âThere are one million tires there,â he says. Then he points to the bailer. There are bricks the size of Volkswagen beetles each holding 100 tires squished together. âWeâve moved 200,000 of these from St. Thomas,â Boogie says proudly. âWhere they go I donât really know for sure, but theyâre not here.â
Continuing our uphill spiral we come to the top of the hill, where the juxtaposition of bulldozers squishing trash contrasts the blue skies, ocean and green hills. The growing mountain we stand on is a sandwich of new trash, sand and rock, and more new trash. Does it matter that the new version of normal, the baseline of what nature is, includes a wasteland? The human evolved aesthetic didnât include this landscape. The human expectation for living novelty and diversity is diminished.
What we saw on the dive and in the dump are a signal that some systems are not working, and that there is a need for innovation and legislation to make it right. The solutions are there. Check out 5gyres.org to see a few. What story will we tell in 30 years? Will we reminisce or rejoice?
Date Posted: January 8, 2010 @ 10:33 pm Comments Off
Posted by: Algalita Admin
LONG BEACH, CA – January 7, 2010. A group of marine scientists propose the world’s oceans are filling with plastic. Today they will set sail from the US Virgin Islands to prove their hypothesis with the “5 Gyres Project.” This collaborative effort between Algalita Marine Research Foundation (AMRF), Livable Legacy and Pangaea Explorations marks the first global study of plastic marine pollution which will expand on AMRF’s groundbreaking research in the North Pacific Gyre where current and wind patterns circulate untold volumes of plastic particles.
“Plastic pollution is a global issue”, says AMRF’s Founder and plastic marine debris expert, Captain Charles Moore. ”We’ve seen the so-called garbage patch of plastic accumulating in the North Pacific Gyre, but there are four other gyres worldwide, each with its own patch and we don’t know yet what we will find in them.”
The first expedition will cross the Sargasso Sea between the West Indies and the Azores where plastic debris is accumulating. The crew will make port in Bermuda giving public lectures, meeting the American Ambassador to Bermuda and picking up new crew members. The second expedition will cross the South Atlantic Gyre from Rio De Janeiro to Cape Town, South Africa in August 2010. To date, little research in this field has been conducted in the southern hemisphere. The ultimate goal of these voyages is to gather a global snapshot of plastic marine pollution by 2011.
From these two research expeditions, together with sampling conducted via research equipment on loan to volunteer sailors on other oceanic journeys, 5 Gyres will gather international data on plastic marine pollution, as well as collecting surface samples and foraging fish for evidence of plastic ingestion. Directing the research and outreach for the Project, husband-wife team, Marcus Eriksen and Anna Cummins will oversee both expeditions.
For additional information about 5 Gyres, visit www.5gyres.org
Project Director: Anna Cummins
Research Coordinator: Marcus Eriksen, PhD
For additional information about Algalita Marine Research Foundation, Captain Charles Moore, and ORV Alguita’s 009 North Pacific Subtropical Gyre expedition,or to learn more about our mission, outreach programs, and research projects, please visit
www.algalita.org or call 562.598.4889.
Date Posted: January 7, 2010 @ 6:20 pm Comments (0)
Posted by: Algalita Admin
Charles Moore talks about the garbage patch that’s turning the Pacific Ocean into a plastic wasteland.
Watch the show online
Date Posted: January 6, 2010 @ 7:04 pm Comments (0)