Monthly Archives: March 2021

Photodegradation

That word above. Yeah, that one right there. Who has heard of photodegradation? Basically, photo means light. Degrade means to break down. The “ation” part basically means to do. So photodegradation means The process of breaking down with light. Plastic bags don’t biodegrade. Instead, they crumble into smaller and smaller bits that are still harmful.

You have heard many stories of Sea Turtles choking to death on plastic bags but once they photodegrade, they are small enough that they aren’t interesting to Sea Turtles. Instead, they are interesting to everything else. I have a feeling that I don’t need to explain what happens then. Eventually, if it isn’t swallowed by animals, it will find its way into a current and find itself into a GARBAGE PATCH! (da da da duhn)

No, a garbage patch isn’t a big floating island of trash. That would be too easy to clean up. A garbage patch is a mass of photodegraded trash that absorbs nutrients and warmth. It also looks an awful lot like plankton which is the base of the food chain. The second link in the chain will starve which results in the chain after in it starving. I have already explained ecosystems and food webs/chains. The worst part is when the poison from the plastic is digested. Eventually, the poison makes its way to us and that is, I’m not going to say the end of the Earth, but it is far from good. Do your part. Don’t flip your grocery sacks out the window. Make a difference.

More facts.

Plastic is made from petroleum; petroleum is made from crude oil. The same crude oil that runs our cars.

Manufacturing of the bags can produce chemicals which settle in the ocean causing ocean acidification which destroys coral reefs and other environments

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, (a massive garbage patch in the pacific if you hadn’t guessed) is now three times the size of France and mostly made of plastic

There is 46 times the amount of actual food in plastic in some locations of the ocean

Arabian Oryx Rebound

As I have published, there are over 10,000 animals endangered, and right behind them there are another 10,000 that are threatened. If people don’t act now, all 20,000 are going to one day be extinct. One team of scientists did just that.

The Arabian Oryx was thought to have been hunted to complete extinction by poachers. David Mallon, co-chair of an antelope specialist group said, “As soon as motor vehicles and modern weapons arrived, the destructive potential of hunting rapidly increased. Before, if you were on a camel and you had a single shot, by the time you had another bullet in the gun, the oryx would’ve run off. But when motor vehicles and more modern, reloadable rifles were introduced — you can wear oryx out through exhaustion — hunting became a lot easier.”

A team of scientists went off on a quest to find the remaining Arabian Oryx. They brought a couple back and bred them. There are now a total of about 1,220 in the wild, moving the population up to threatened; the first animal species to come from thought extinction to a “mere” Threatened. To move the Oryxes up to Near Threatened, the population needs to reach 1,400 but considering where they came from and where they are now, that is just one small jump for Oryx, yet one huge leap for Animal Kind. Let’s make a difference; one creature at a time.

Photo by Charl Durand on Pexels.com