What’s up with the
Albatross’
Why do 1/3 of the Laysan chicks die in Midway?
Discovery-Monterrey Bay Aquarium
• Meet Makana the Laysan Albatross
Questions???????????
– What is something that floats that these birds mistake for food?
– Why is it a problem for the baby chicks to eat this material?
– What plastic objects have been found in the stomach of dead albatross chicks?
– Is this a problem?– What is the cause of the problem?
I’m just a kid! Can I make a Difference?
Photos courtesy Captain Charles Moore - AMRF
Some Names For The New Buffalo Bayou Trash BoatBy Brittanie Shey in Spaced CityFri., Oct. 9 2009 @ 8:58AM Last year, Buffalo Bayou Partnership's bubblegum-pink skimmer boat, the Mighty Tidy, capsized during Hurricane Ike. The Partnership recently purchased a a new "TrashCat" brand boat, a type of vessel specially designed to skim floating debris from the waters of Buffalo Bayou.
It's bad luck to have a boat without a name, so to celebrate its arrival, they're asking for the public's help in choosing a fitting moniker. From BBP:
The most environmentally and creatively inspired name for the skimmer boat will be selected as the winning name.The winner of the boat naming contest will receive a complimentary chartered pontoon boat trip aboard BBP's The Osprey, for you and your 20 guests.Six years ago, The Mighty Tidy was named by a second grader from Lamkin Elementary. Hair Balls thinks we're smarter than a second grader, so here are some of the names we've thought up:
USS Dookie
The Flying Sludgeman
Maid of the Shist
The Edmund Shitzgerald
The Garbarge
The Poop Sloop
USS Detritus
To enter the Name that Skimmer Boat Contest, send your suggested boat name, your name, mailing address and e-mail address to [email protected]. Readers, add your names in the comments.
How plastic is recycled• According to the Beverage Marketing Corp, the average American consumed 1.6
gallons of bottled water in 1976. In 2006 that number jumped to 28.3 gallons. • Today, 80 percent of Americans have access to a plastics recycling program. • More than 2.3 billion pounds of plastic bottles were recycled in 2007. Although the
amount of plastic bottles recycled in the U.S. has grown every year since 1990, the actual recycling rate remains steady at around 24 percent.
• In 2007, more than 325 million pounds of wide-mouth plastic containers were recovered for recycling. (This included deli containers, yogurt cups, etc.)
• In recent years, the number of U.S. plastics recycling business has nearly tripled. More than 1,600 businesses are involved in recycling post-consumer plastics.
• Plastics in the U.S. are made primarily (70 percent) from domestic natural gas. • Plastic bags and product wraps (known collectively as “plastic film”) are commonly
recycled at the many collection programs offered through major grocery stores. • Recycling one ton of plastic saves 7.4 cubic yards of landfill space. • During Keep America Beautiful 2008 Great American Cleanup, volunteers recovered
and recycled 189,000,000 PET (plastic) bottles that had been littered along highways, waterways and parks.
A Story About
Albatross
© Sophie Webb 2004
Tracking their Travels and
Tracking Plastic Trash
“If we didn’t clean our shorelines, where
could the litter go?”
“How can your coastal clean-up efforts benefit these
unique birds?”
Seabird Diversity
Four main orders of seabirds: Sphenisciformes - Penguins
Procellariiformes – Albatrosses, Shearwaters, Fulmars, & Petrels
Pelecaniformes - Pelicans, Cormorants, Boobies, Frigate birds
Charadriiformes - Gulls, Terns, & Alcids
Penguin
Petrel
Pelican
Alcid
H. Nevins
H. Nevins
J. Harv
ey
WW
W.n
zbird
s.com
Seabird Feeding Methods
(Ashmole 1971)
Plunging
FEEDERS
What is a seabird?
© W.Henry
© J. Adams
Diagram credit: Lars Löfgren
Photo credit: P.Pyle
Black-footed albatross
Laysan albatross
Unique characteristic of Procellariiformes?
• Tubular nostrils – often called “tube-nosed seabirds”
Black-footed albatross
Sophie Webb
Hyrenbach
What makes seabirds vulnerable?
• Long-line and other fishery interactions
• Oiling from oil spills
• Threats at colonies: introduced mammals, habitat destruction
Photo: W. Henry
Ebbert
• Marine debris
What are some threats to seabirds?
• entanglement
What makes seabirds vulnerable?
Photo: Cynthia Vanderlip
• Plastic ingestion
Seabirds most susceptible to plastic ingestion
Saenz
Saenz
• Black-footed and Laysan Albatross
• Northern fulmar
Webb
Photo credit: Kinnan
Photo credit: Kinnan
Should contain:•50% fish•32% squid•5% crustaceans•10% stomach oil(Harrison et al. 1983Fry 1987)
Analysis of Albatross Chick Boluses
• Kure Atoll, Hawaiian Island Chain (Kinan 2000)– Analyzed 144 boluses from Laysan and
Black-footed albatrosses– Plastic found in every single one (100%)
Photo: C. Vanderlip
Effects of plastic ingestion?
• Large plastic items – ulcerations, infection & obstruction
• Small plastic items – reduce meal size, dehydration
• Leaching of toxic chemicals from the plastic ?
• Lower breeding success ?
Long-term effects of plastic ingestion?
• everywhere - both marine and coastal environments
• floating
• water column • on the seabed
• on beaches and shores
(http://www.marine-litter.gpa.unep.org)
Where is marine debris found ?
90% of floating marine debris is plastic2.5 cm
1 inch
Photos: Kathy Cousins / Irene Kinan
How does plastic get into the sea?
1. Littering by beachgoers
2. Run-off from land e.g. rivers and storm drains
3. Direct dumping into the ocean
4. Accidental loss from ships
2. Run-off from land e.g. rivers and storm drains
http://geosci.sfsu.edu/courses/geol102/ex6.html
Major Ocean Currents
North Pacific GyreAlaskan Gyre
1 Shoe Spill May 27, 19902 250 recovered, March 26, 19913 200 recovered, May 18, 19914 100 recovered, Jan-Feb 19915 200 recovered, Nov.-Dec.1991
6 200 recovered Feb.Mar 19917 150 recovered April 19918 200 recovered May 19919 Several recovered Jan-Mar 199310 Predicted Jan-July 1994
Drifting Tots Tub Toys!!!
Twelve years and counting: (http://www.beachcombers.org/)
January 10, 1992
Sitka AK, Aug.- Sept., 1992
2,200 miles adrift
Dean Orbison
2004 – still finding them!!
Algalita Marine Research Foundation
Learn more about studies of the Eastern / Western garbage patches conducted by the Algalita Marine Research Foundation http://www.alguita.com/
“Eastern garbage patch”
Facts about Plastic in the Gyre(Algalita Marine Research Foundation)
• 6 lbs of plastic for each pound of surface zooplankton in the North Pacific central Gyre
• Plastic does not biodegrade; it’s broken down by sunlight into smaller pieces
Studying Albatrosses in California…………..
Do seabirds venture into this plastic zone?
Danzenbacher
Why research is needed?
What will satellite tracking and remote sensing allow us to do?
www.seaturtle.orgwww.signalsofspring.net/
METHODSMETHODS
Captured 18 birds within Cordell Bank NMS in July - Aug. 2004 & 2005
Equipped birds with Sirtrack Kiwisat 202 transmitters (54 g)
Ready for release……..
Size: 7 x 4 x 2 cm Weight: 54 g Antenna: 18 cm
Danzenbacher
RESULTS OF 2004 TRACKING:RESULTS OF 2004 TRACKING:
Tracked albatrosses ventured outside of U.S. EEZ, with 61% locations in the high seas
Three birds ranged into the western north Pacific Ocean, west of the dateline (180 o W)
Unpublished data Hyrenbach et al. 2004
Black-footed Albatross tracks overlap with Algalita Marine Research Foundation’s
“Eastern Garbage Patch”
Unpublished data Hyrenbach et al. 2004
Pop Quiz !!!!!
1. What do albatross regurgitate? A bolus
2. How much of floating debris is plastic? 50% 90% 20%
3. Most marine debris comes from land sources. True or False
4. How is marine debris moved around bays and oceans?
Winds & Currents
5. What seabird feeding method can result in eating lots of plastic?
Diving for food Picking food from the ocean surface
6. Why?
“If we didn’t clean ourbeaches, where could
the litter go?”
“How can your coastal clean-up efforts benefit these
unique birds?”
Solutions…..
How can you be part of the solution?
Photos courtesy Captain Charles Moore - AMRF
Trash Monster!!
Artist: Keary Sorenson
Beach litter collected October-March 2003 Fort Ross to Rodeo Beach, California
Acknowledgements & Credits
Primary author: Carol Keiper, Oikonos Ecosystem Knowledge This presentation is adapted from presentations funded by the California Coastal Commission’s Whale Tail Grant Program Contributing authors: Dr. David Hyrenbach, PhD, Duke University; Hannah Nevins & Michelle Hester, Oikonos-Ecosystem Knowledge; Cheryl Baduini, PhD, Claremont Colleges; Josh Adams, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories & USGS Jennifer Stock, Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary; William Henry, University of California Santa Cruz; Captain Charles Moore, Algalita Marine Research Foundation Funding for Black-footed Albatross conservation research provided by National Fish & Wildlife Foundation
Photos and Slides: P.Pyle, B.Saenz, B.Henry, S.Webb, D.Hyrenbach, M.Danzenbacher, J.Stock, H. Nevins, J. Adams, J. Harvey, C VanderlipK.Cousins, I. Kinan, Myra Finkelstein
Use Agreement (October 25, 2006)
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