Current:Home > MarketsPlastic is suffocating coral reefs — and it's not just bottles and bags -Financial Clarity Guides
Plastic is suffocating coral reefs — and it's not just bottles and bags
View
Date:2025-04-14 21:06:10
Finding new species of fish was the goal when marine biologist Hudson Pinheiro was diving in the Verde Island Passage in the Philippines. And he found them. But while he was down there, he found something else that was deeply troubling: plastic — loads of it smothering the coral reef where the fish were living.
"It's sad," Pinheiro, currently a researcher with the University of São Paulo, told NPR. "It's super, super sad."
Pinheiro expanded his research focus beyond fish to the plastics they live with. Of particular interest to him: The kinds of plastics covering the reefs and how they were impacting the health of the corals and their fish communities.
Researchers have previously found that plastic can not only "suffocate and kill the corals, sponges and other invertebrates," says Pinheiro, but also increase the likelihood of a coral getting a disease by 20 times, according to a 2018 study published in Science.
Over the next several years, Pinheiro and 18 other researchers examined trash from 84 reefs across the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans — often spending 5 to 6 hours per dive. In harder to reach locations, the team used video recorders mounted on underwater vehicles.
The result was what Pinheiro calls the most comprehensive catalog to date of the acres of plastic debris impacting corals. His team found that it sits atop 92% of the reefs they studied, including some of the most remote and uninhabited ones. His study appears in this week's issue of Nature.
More than bags and bottles
What Pinheiro and his team found was that the trash wasn't just plastic bags and bottles. The lion's share was actually plastic fishing debris, "like ropes, long lines, nets that get entangled and get stuck in the reef," he says.
Even after all this fishing gear settles on the coral, it keeps on killing other marine animals. It continues to catch fish even after it's been discarded or lost – a phenomenon known as "ghost fishing."
The researchers were also surprised to discover there was more plastic enmeshed in deeper reefs than shallower ones.
That may be because "most of the fish are already overfished in the shallow water," says Pinheiro. "So the fishermen [are] moving to deeper reefs to catch the same amount that they used to catch before."
Plastic pollution was denser on reefs near cities and markets, which is logical. More people equals more plastic waste. But there was also a great deal of plastic found in marine protected areas, underwater regions intended for long-term conservation, where you would think people would be more careful about littering. That was curious at first, says Pinheiro, but made sense when he considered that's where fish (and therefore fishermen) are found in relatively higher abundance.
Where plastic waste on reefs is worse
Pinheiro says that low and middle-income countries (like Brazil, the Philippines, and the East African nation of Comoros) tend to have more plastic pollution due to limited resources allocated to waste management and improving fishing gear. "If you don't take care of collecting and recycling and having a good destination" to dispose of the trash, explains Pinheiro, "it easily [gets into] the environment."
"We need to be thinking about how higher income countries can help lower income countries pay for their solutions," says ecologist Chelsea Rochman who studies plastic pollution at the University of Toronto and wasn't involved in the research.
"It's often been the case that where people look for plastic pollution, people find it," she says. But what makes this study special, says Rochman, is that the authors have counted the plastic in the same way across many locations to show "this global distribution in a way that you can make comparisons, which will be really important for management."
Pinheiro says he's worried by what he and his colleagues found, but he's committed to try to turn things around for the reefs. He says that governments need regulations that reduce single-use plastic and improve trash collection.
And he stresses the importance of working with and supporting communities dependent on fishing. "How can we change the ropes, the nets?," he asks. "We need to find a biodegradable material, like made from fibers as we used to do before."
He points to a couple success stories like the prohibition of single-use plastic bags (in California, for example). In other places like Honduras and the Maldives, says Pinheiro, they're offering incentives to produce biodegradable materials for products like clothing. And he points to Fernando de Noronha, a Brazilian volcanic archipelago that has banned plastic packaging and is encouraging the use of eco-friendly materials.
The overall goal is for all this plastic to stop finding its way to the reefs, he says. And perhaps start cleaning up what's already there.
Next up for Pinheiro: He will expand his work on plastics and fish communities to cover rocky shores and rocky reefs. And he plans to work at the regional level to make policy recommendations to managers and governments.
veryGood! (5317)
Related
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Inter Miami's MLS playoff failure sets stage for Messi's last act, Alexi Lalas says
- In an AP interview, the next Los Angeles DA says he’ll go after low-level nonviolent crimes
- Ford agrees to pay up to $165 million penalty to US government for moving too slowly on recalls
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Martin Scorsese on the saints, faith in filmmaking and what his next movie might be
- Jake Paul's only loss led him to retool the team preparing him to face Mike Tyson
- Historian Doris Kearns Goodwin to kick off fundraising effort for Ohio women’s suffrage monument
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Halle Berry Rocks Sheer Dress She Wore to 2002 Oscars 22 Years Later
Ranking
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Advance Auto Parts is closing hundreds of stores in an effort to turn its business around
- West Virginia expands education savings account program for military families
- Reese Witherspoon's Daughter Ava Phillippe Introduces Adorable New Family Member
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- It's Red Cup Day at Starbucks: Here's how to get your holiday cup and cash in on deals
- 'America's flagship' SS United States has departure from Philadelphia to Florida delayed
- Democrat Janelle Bynum flips Oregon’s 5th District, will be state’s first Black member of Congress
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Tech consultant spars with the prosecutor over details of the death of Cash App founder Bob Lee
Padma Lakshmi, John Boyega, Hunter Schafer star in Pirelli's 2025 calendar: See the photos
Olympic Skier Lindsey Vonn Coming Out of Retirement at 40
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
Mike Tyson concedes the role of villain to young foe in 58-year-old’s fight with Jake Paul
Demure? Brain rot? Oxford announces shortlist for 2024 Word of the Year: Cast your vote
Study finds Wisconsin voters approved a record number of school referenda