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Charitable organization protecting and preserving sea turtles. Fighting against the extinction of the sea turtles. Fighting against the extinction of the sea turtles. turtles, marine turtles, turtels, sea turtles, turtle conservation, eretmochelys imbricata, chelonia mydas, caretta caretta, dermochelys coriacea, chelonia agassizi, lepidochelys kempii, lepidochelys olivacea, natator depressus, bastard, flatback, hawksbill, green turtles, leatherback, olive ridley, turtoises, turtoise shell, loggerhead, turtle eggs, sangalaki, indonesia, celebes, derawan, island, hatchling, hatchery, foundation, animal protection, cabo verde. Die Turtle Foundation ist eine Stiftung zum Schutz und zur Erhaltung von Meeresschildkröten. Sie kämpft gegen die rücksichtslose Ausrottung der Meeresschildkröten. Kampf gegen die rücksichtslose Ausrottung der Meeresschildkröten. schildkröte, schildkrötenschutz, schildkroetenschutz, meeresschildkröten, meeresschildkroeten, schildkröten, schildkroeten, eretmochelys imbricata, chelonia mydas, caretta caretta, dermochelys coriacea, chelonia agassizi, lepidochelys kempii, lepidochelys olivacea, natator depressus karett, grüne meeresschildkröten, lederschildkröten, lederschildkroeten, schildkröteneier, schildkroeteneier, indonesien, tierschutz, bali, borneo, schildpatt, insel, stiftung, artenschutz, schildkröten-stiftung, kapverden, Yayasan penyu, Yayasan penyu. Perjuangan melawan kepunahan penyu. Perjuangan melawan kepunahan penyu. penyu, perlindungan penyu, penyu laut, penyu2, karet, penyu hijau, penyu belimbing, telur penyu, Indonesia, konservasi fauna, Bali, Kalimantan, pulau, Yayasan, konservasi flora dan fauna, Yayasan penyu, Perjuangan melawan kepunahan penyu, eretmochelys imbricata, chelonia mydas, caretta caretta, dermochelys coriacea, chelonia agassizi, lepidochelys kempii, lepidochelys olivacea, natator depressus
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Turtle Foundation Blog

Welcome to our blog where you can find regular updates and news from our projects on Boavista, Cape Verde and as well as from Indonesia.

 

> Blog Cape Verde

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This blog may be partly in English and partly in German language.

 

Sep 30

Written by: frank zindel
30.09.2009

Our Plastic Legacy Afloat
Until recently, the earth had seven continents. To that number, humans have added an eighth - an amorphous, floating mass of waste plastic trapped in a gyre of currents in the north Pacific, between Hawaii and Japan. Researchers have estimated that this garbage patch may contain as much as 100 million tons of plastic debris and is perhaps twice the size of Texas, if not larger.

Across the world's oceans there are still many more millions of tons of floating plastic, most of it originating from land, not ships. All of this solid waste is bad news. It traps as many as a million seabirds every year, as well as some 100,000 marine mammals.

Now comes what could be more bad news. A new study, announced at a recent meeting of the American Chemical Society, suggests that plastics in seawater break down faster than expected. As they do, they apparently release contaminants, including potentially harmful styrene compounds not normally found in nature. This was not merely a laboratory finding. The author of the study, Katsuhiko Saido, a scientist at Nihon University in Japan, found the same chemical compounds in seawater samples collected near Malaysia, the Pacific Northwest, and in the northern Pacific.

The effects of these broken-down plastics on marine organisms is as yet unknown, and they will be harder to measure than the damage that plastic refuse does to sea-life. But adding to the contaminant load of the oceans cannot be a good thing.

What we are seeing here is yet another of the large-scale, potentially tragic, uncontrolled experiments that humans have conducted on their environment without intending to. And though we cannot do much about the millions of tons that have already been sent to sea, we can at least begin to ask ourselves, when we get ready to pitch a plastic container, where is this likely to end up?

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