Democracy Dies in Darkness

More than half the world’s sea turtles have eaten plastic, new study claims

September 15, 2015 at 9:10 a.m. EDT
A Hawksbill sea turtle swimming in Lady Elliot Island, Australia. (Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Ugh, humanity.

According to a new study, half of the sea turtles on the planet have ingested some form of plastic. This comes just days after another study (with some of the same researchers involved) reported similar findings in seabirds -- some 90 percent of which have consumed plastic.

[Nearly all of the world’s seabirds have eaten plastic, study estimates]

The new study, led by Qamar Schuyler of the University of Queensland and published in Global Change Biology, estimates that 52 percent of sea turtles worldwide have eaten plastic debris, some 13 million tons of which is dumped into the ocean every year. The east coasts of Australia and North America, Southeast Asia, southern Africa  and Hawaii seem to be particularly dangerous. Schuyler used a combination of predictive models and actual necroscopy evidence to reach his conclusions.

At first, they thought it was a worm. Researchers soon realized the object stuck in this sea turtle's nostril was actually a plastic straw. (Video: COASTS)

First, Schuyler told The Post, her team made a model of marine plastic distribution based on found debris. Then they overlaid the distribution of turtle populations over this model, to see how much debris species would likely encounter. Published sea turtle necroscopies were then factored in, to see how likely it was for turtles to ingest certain amounts of plastic based on the congestion of plastic in their area.

Olive Ridley Turtles (Lepidochelys olivacea), which eat jellyfish and other floating animals in the open ocean, were shown to be at the most risk. The species is considered "threatened" in most parts of the world, but is actually already endangered off the coast of Mexico because of poaching.

[Mexico’s new plan to protect endangered turtles? Drones.]

According to Schuyler's research, we need to protect these creatures from more than just poachers -- we need to protect them from our trash.

"Turtles can be killed directly by ingesting plastics, through blockage of the intestines or through piercing of the intestinal wall," Schuyler said. They can also die because of toxic chemicals that were used to create the plastic, or that were absorbed during the plastic's journey through the ocean.

Perhaps most distressingly, turtles can starve to death because they feel full after swallowing plastic debris.

"Currently plastics are being produced at an exponentially increasing rate, but globally our waste disposal technology and capacity is not increasing at the same rate," Schuyler said. "Plus we now know that unseen micro plastics are entering the oceans from our cosmetics, from the clothing we wear, and from fragmentation of larger plastic particles. Unless we take substantial action, the problem is bound to increase."

[Ever wondered what it would be like to ride a sea turtle through the Great Barrier Reef?]

Schuyler pointed out that the recent study on seabirds showed that a decrease in plastic concentration leads to a decrease in consumption of it, which gives her hope that we may be able to turn the tide.

To make a difference, she said, consumers should just say no to single-use plastics, like grocery bags and disposable water bottles. And microbeads, which are present in many cosmetic products, are a big no-no.

"We now know that both sea turtles and seabirds are experiencing very high levels of debris ingestion, and that the issue is growing," Chris Wilcox, lead author of the seabird study, said of the new research"It is only a matter of time before we see the same problems in other species, and even in the fish we eat."

Correction: An earlier version of this post mistakenly referred to the female Schuyler as male. This has been corrected. 

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Mexico’s new plan to protect endangered turtles? Drones.

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