Did Missing Turtles Eat Plastic Bags?

George Shillinger in Monterey, CA -- Mistaking them for jellyfish, Stephanie, Windy, Drexelina and Champira ate a bunch of plastic bags. Ingesting the bags weakened them because they were unable to digest their real food. They couldn’t avoid the nets, or they starved. [Click here to read this series of blog posts in Spanish.]

One of the divas of the Great Turtle Race, Stephanie Colburtle, hasn’t sent us a message for more than 100 days. We’re a little concerned about her and three other turtles: Windy, Champira and Drexelina. The other seven turtles are well on their way to their distant feeding grounds off Peru and Chile. This week, we’re looking at all the possibilities of what could have happened to the missing turtles.

“Last year on the beach in Costa Rica, a turtle defecated a plastic bag,” says TOPP researcher Jim Spotila, who’s been monitoring leatherbacks at Playa Grande, Costa Rica, for decades. The Drexel University professor founded the Leatherback Trust to save the leatherback turtle from extinction. “So I think they encounter them quite often. They pass them through their digestive system, or they get caught in their gut. They could starve to death. When we do necropsies on turtles that get caught in nets and drown, we find plastic bags. Are they weak because they haven’t been able to eat? Is that why they get tangled up and get caught? It’s hard to tell.”


 

 

The tons of plastic that’s dumped into the oceans ends up concentrating in giant eddys the size of football fields. Here's an animation from the GreenPeace Web site that shows how plastic accumulates in the ocean over time.

And here are photos of plastic bags taken from the stomach of a green turtle that died, plus pieces of netting, and, with the bags laid out, a compressed piece of styrofoam.

 

Next Week: What Does All This Mean?????

 

 

Plastic inside turtles

Dear George,
Vanakkam! Greetings from Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.

Gosh! It is shocking to see the amount of plastics that could enter Turtles body. How many of the marine species that feed on jelly fishes must be getting killed by the plastics thrown around?
I hope some day we all change...
regards,
ramjee

Change is now, Change is you and me...

We don't have to "hope some day we all change"... we can change NOW.
One by one, we can stop taking and using plastic bags; stop buying things that come in plastic bags; stop using plastic wraps on food; and we can share this knowledge with our family and friends; we can stand up and make the plastic companies responsible for their materials. The worst thing we can do is to just shake our heads and say "too bad". Our INACTION is what is killing these turtles to extinction. Write to our officials about banning plastic bags...some countries have already ban plastic bags... they are the courageous ones.

Reusable bags make a great gift - give with a message about these issues. When I gave these to my friends for christmas, some use them, some don't, but for sure, they were all ignorant about the plastic problem before. The ones that don't change are too caught up in their own lives to care...it really says something about our friends.