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www.businessgreen.com...
Around 46 per cent of the plastic in the world's oceans is currently estimated to be lost or discarded fishing gear . . .
originally posted by: chiefsmom
Yep, we suck.
.......
Again, we suck.
originally posted by: nerbot
originally posted by: chiefsmom
Yep, we suck.
.......
Again, we suck.
Speaking of which, cigarette filters made from cellulose acetone are one of the other massive pollutants in the sea. They take many years to break down and are often ingested but not digested by sealife. Trillions per year.
We need to end humans so the planet can finally take a breath of it's own for a change.
More jabs please.
originally posted by: Dalamax
I would have thought barnacles would eventually keep it on the bottom.
I was taught that if a fishing ground isnāt fished it goes away.
static1.squarespace.com...
Because modern fishing nets and other fishing gear
components are largely made of plastics, ghost
gear potentially persists in the marine environment
in some form (e.g., synthetic fibers) indefinitely.
originally posted by: BeyondKnowledge3
originally posted by: Dalamax
I would have thought barnacles would eventually keep it on the bottom.
I was taught that if a fishing ground isnāt fished it goes away.
The bottom of the oceans lack calcium that the barnical shells are made of and those shells would be consumed quickly by chemical action in the seawater.
Fishing grounds are found, not made in most cases. They are an area where the fish gather for their benefit, not because that is where people catch them. People have to locate the fish, the fish come there for other reasons.
originally posted by: TimBurr
a reply to: Dalamax
Can't find specific information on longevity.
static1.squarespace.com...[/ quote]
Because modern fishing nets and other fishing gear
components are largely made of plastics, ghost
gear potentially persists in the marine environment
in some form (e.g., synthetic fibers) indefinitely.
Potentially persists. Iāve watched synthetic rope deteriorate in sun and salt water quite quickly.
I guess that just reduces the full rope down to micro plasticsā¦. Some of those plastic eating bacteria released free range into the oceans is sounding like a brilliant knee jerk reaction to this issue šš