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Para ilmuwan
terkemuka mengungkapkan meningkatnya keprihatinan tentang 'microplastics' di
laut
Leading scientists express rising concern about 'microplastics' in the
ocean
Date:
July 10,
2014
Source:
Sea Education Association
Summary:
Microplastics -- microscopic particles of plastic
debris -- are of increasing concern because of their widespread presence in the
oceans and the potential physical and toxicological risks they pose to
organisms.
....................................
Microplastics -- microscopic particles of plastic debris --
are of increasing concern because of their widespread presence in the oceans
and the potential physical and toxicological risks they pose to organisms.
This is the
view of two of the world's most eminent authorities on the subject, Professor
Kara Lavender Law, of Sea Education Association (Woods Hole, MA), and Professor
Richard Thompson of Plymouth University (UK).
In an
article published today in the journal Science, the two scientists have
called for urgent action to "turn off the tap" and divert plastic
waste away from the marine environment.
Microplastics
have now been documented in all five of the ocean's subtropical gyres -- and
have even been detected in Arctic sea ice -- with some of the highest
accumulations occurring thousands of miles from land. These plastic bits have
been found in organisms ranging in size from small invertebrates to large
mammals, and are known to concentrate toxic chemicals already present in
seawater. This raises concern about the potential consequences to marine
organisms.
"Our
scientific understanding of this environmental problem is accelerating rapidly,
with many new research efforts that go well beyond simply documenting the
presence of plastic in the ocean," said Professor Law, who led a 2008
paper in Science describing widespread plastic contamination in the North Atlantic
Ocean from more than 25 years of data collected by Sea Education Association
faculty and undergraduate students during SEA Semester study abroad voyages.
Most studies
of ocean microplastic focus on the debris that floats at the sea surface, but
this leaves other potential collections of plastic unaccounted for.
"Major
unanswered questions remain about the amounts of microplastic debris that might
be accumulating on the seafloor," said Professor Thompson, whose 2004
paper in Science first coined the term 'microplastics'. "We also
know very little about where, geographically, are the largest inputs of plastic
to the marine environment."
Despite open
questions such as these, the authors say that microplastics are already
something to worry about, and that efforts are needed to divert the source of
this debris away from the ocean, or to "turn off the tap." This was
the message that Professor Thompson delivered to Senator John Kerry last month
at the US State Department's Our Oceans Conference: Marine Pollution. Both say
that plastic waste should be viewed as a valuable resource to be captured and
re-used, which would simultaneously reduce the amount entering the environment.
Policy
initiatives have been gaining momentum at municipal, state, and national levels
in the U.S. In June this year Illinois passed legislation banning microbeads
(microplastics used in cosmetic products that enter the environment through
wastewater), with similar legislation pending in New York and California, and
recently introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives. In April this year
the European Parliament voted to reduce the consumption of single use plastic
carrier bags and phase out bags that fragment rather than degrade.
"We
have been conducting an unintended experiment with the addition of large
amounts of this human-made material into the environment," said Law.
"But this is a solvable problem. By each of us making small changes in our
daily habits -- by carrying reusable water bottles and coffee mugs, for example
-- we can collectively reduce our dependence on 'disposable' items that might
ultimately be lost to the environment."
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by Sea Education Association. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Kara Lavender Law, Richard C. Thompson. Microplastics in the seas. Science, 2014 DOI: 10.1126/science.1254065