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| The green turtle washed up on a beach in Chanthaburi province on June 4 and died two days later |
Startling images of plastic shreds, rubber bands and other debris found jammed in the stomach of a green turtle in Thailand have highlighted the crisis of waste-strewn seas following the widely publicised death of a whale this month.
Thailand is
one of the world's largest consumers of plastic, which kills hundreds of marine
mammals and reptiles swimming off its coasts every year.
The problem
grabbed public attention in the first week of June when an autopsy of a dead
pilot whale found near the border with Malaysia revealed 80 plastic bags inside
its stomach.
The green
turtle, a protected species, suffered a similar fate after washing up on a
beach in the eastern province of Chanthaburi on June 4, Weerapong
Laovechprasit, a veterinarian at the Eastern Marine and Coastal Resource
Research and Development Centre, told AFP.
Plastic, rubber bands, pieces of balloon and other rubbish had filled the turtle's intestinal tract, leaving it unable to eat and causing its death two days later.
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Plastic,
rubber bands, pieces of balloon and other rubbish had filled
the turtle's
intestinal track, leaving it unable to eat
|
Plastic, rubber bands, pieces of balloon and other rubbish had filled the turtle's intestinal tract, leaving it unable to eat and causing its death two days later.
"It
was feeling weak and couldn't swim," Weerapong said. "The main cause
of death is the sea trash."
Veterinarians
discovered the blockage using X-rays and tried to save the turtle by feeding it
intravenously, but were only able to extract the garbage after its death.
Weerapong
said that in the past about 10 percent of the green turtles stranded on beaches
in the area had ingested plastic or suffered infections after coming into
contact with the waste, but this year about 50 percent of the incidents were
trash-related.
More than
half of the eight million tonnes of plastic waste dumped into the world's
oceans every year comes from five Asian countries: China, Indonesia, the
Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand, according to a 2015 Ocean Conservancy
report.


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