In 2011, 7,575 volunteers collected, tallied, and removed
over 452,698 pieces of debris from NJ’s shoreline during Clean Ocean Action’s
26th Annual Beach Sweeps. The majority of the debris removed
was disposable plastics—items designed to be used once and thrown away.
Plastic, including foam, represents 83% of the total waste found. It is
clear: disposable plastic items continue to litter beaches, threaten marine
life, and impact water quality. The 2011 data marks the first year in
Beach Sweeps history that cigarettes have not been one of the three most common
items of debris collected during the bi-annual event.
The Beach Sweeps has become New Jersey’s largest
environmental event with thousands of citizens combing nearly all 127 miles
ocean coastline and additional bay beaches. The spring event coincides
with Earth Month to provide citizens with an educational, hands-on, meaningful,
rewarding activity to make a real difference.
In 2011, plastic pieces increased sharply, becoming the most
collected piece of debris. The prevalence of plastic pieces found at the Beach Sweeps is a symbol of
our ‘throwaway’ culture. This upward trend may
be due to the increase in use of single use disposable plastics and their
persistence. It is important,
now more than ever, that we reduce, reuse, and recycle plastics
properly.
Plastic does not biodegrade, instead through a combination
of chemical reactions and physical forces (including sunlight and waves)
plastics can slowly break down into smaller and smaller pieces and in the
process release toxic chemicals into the sea, such as Bisphenol A (BPA)
and styrene trimer (a liquid hydrocarbon).
Plastic pieces
can be deadly to marine life as they can be accidently ingested by or entangle
wildlife. During the 2011 Sweeps, 20 animals
were found dead due to entanglement of nylon balloon string, fishing line, and
six-pack rings. Beach Sweeps volunteers were able to free three entangled
animals at the event.
Plastics also
pose physical and chemical hazards when ingested by wildlife. Ingestion
of plastics can result in starvation, stress, reproductive defects, cancer, and
can be fatal to marine life. Plastics also release toxic chemicals as
they break down, and they absorb and amass toxic pollutants from the
environment.
Another highlight from 2011’s data is the
decline in cigarette filters collected— dropping from the top 3 most common
pieces of debris for the first time in 19 years. Other
smoking-related items (packaging, lighters, cigar tips) also declined.
The
overall decline of smoking items may be a result of more smoking bans on
beaches, more appropriate disposal and awareness, and an overall societal
decrease in smokers. Hopefully, this will be a trend that continues, as
cigarette filters are among some of the most toxic items found in the marine
environment.
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