Google – AFP, 9 August 2013
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A Green sea
turtle at the Gumbo Limbo Nature Center, Florida, on
January 8, 2010 (Getty
Images/AFP, Joe Raedle)
|
SYDNEY —
Endangered green turtles are ingesting more man-made debris, including
potentially lethal plastic products, than ever before, a new Australian study
has shown.
The majestic
turtles are significantly more likely to swallow plastic than they were in the
1980s, the study, published in the journal Conservation Biology, showed.
The
research reviewed scientific literature on the ingestion of man-made rubbish in
the ocean by sea turtles published since 1985.
It showed
that six of the world's seven species of sea turtles have been found to ingest
debris, and all six are listed as globally vulnerable or endangered.
"We
found that for green sea turtles, the likelihood that a sea turtle has ingested
debris has nearly doubled in the last 25 years," Qamar Schuyler from the
University of Queensland, who led the study, told AFP on Friday.
"Specifically
for green turtles, it does appear that they are eating a lot more debris than
they used to."
The study
found that the likelihood of a green turtle, which can grow to 1.5 metres (five
feet) and live for 80 years, ingesting debris jumped from about 30 percent in
1985 to nearly 50 percent in 2012.
The
research said it was clear that since the first data was recorded more than 100
years ago, the amount of refuse leatherback turtles had ingested had also
increased.
However,
between 1985 and 2012 their intake had been stable.
Plastic
products eaten by turtles and other marine life can be lethal, killing the
animals by either blocking their stomachs and starving them or through
puncturing their intestinal system.
Schuyler
said ingested plastics could also be releasing toxins into the animals, either
via chemicals in the plastics themselves or which the products have absorbed as
they have floated around the ocean.
![]() |
Green baby
turtles in a container during a turtle release programme in
Indonesia's Bali on
June 13, 2013 (AFP, Sonny Tumbelaka)
|
"The
animal may not die of that right away but it may impact things like their
reproductive cycle and that has longer-term consequences," she said.
Schuyler, a
doctoral candidate, said the data showed that turtles washing up with lots of
plastic in them were not necessarily found in the most polluted or populated
places.
"So it
means that they are ingesting that debris usually somewhere farther away from
where they end up," she said, adding that this suggested that a global
response was needed to counter the problem.
"What
we really need to look at is a large scale movement to stop debris entering the
oceans."
The
research, analysing 37 studies published from 1985 to 2012 which reported on
data collected from before 1900 through to 2011, found that turtles in nearly
all regions ingested debris, most commonly plastic.
"Our
results show clearly that debris ingestion by sea turtles is a global
phenomenon of increasing magnitude," the study said.
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