Hello and welcome to my blog discussing humanities pollution of the worlds oceans.
We rely on the worlds oceans for a variety of reasons. They regulate our climate, they give us oxygen, they give us food. But we've turned our oceans into a plastic trash can.
This blog will investigate mans affect on the hydrosphere, with
particular emphasis on the role of plastics based pollution. During the course
of this blog I hope to discuss a range of subtopics: pollution variation,
environmental concerns, ecological concerns, current management schemes and
future predictions.
Humanities domination over the Earth system began on a global
scale with the onset of the Industrial Revolution. During this time capitalism
emerged, production yields intensified, populations expanded and consumerism
developed. Mans exploitation of the Earth's resources was unprecedented, as was
his ingenuity and his environmental pollution.
Presently the range of pollutants that humanity produces increases
with each new invention. During the 1960s and 70s pollution in the worlds
oceans was dominated by pesticides and herbicides, in the 1980s and 90s it
was polluted by horrendous oil
spills (Popularmechanics, 2015).
Now there is one main pollutant which is having astronomically
detrimental affects on the worlds
oceans...
Plastic.
Plastic based products have only been in production for around 60
years and so their effects as oceanic pollutants have a brief history. But that
is not to say that the physical dimension of the problem is small, as plastics
account for 60% of all marine debris and affect every ocean on the planet. On a
temporal scale plastics are predicted to remain within the ocean for between
10-100 years due to the plastics durability and non biodegradable
properties.
Plastic pollution within the oceans has detrimental results for
marine environments, with a range of affects, from creating marine 'dead zones'
spanning tens of kilometres, to individually affecting marine fauna. Within
science there is a general consensus that the increased levels of plastic
pollution have lead to a number of species becoming endangered. Thus,
humanities corruption of the Earth system has lead to some rather drastic
suggestions that we are creating the 'great
sixth extinction phase' (The Guardian, 2015).
See video below for an introduction of the proposed
topic (Video courtesy of the US Department
of State).
This blog will investigate mans affect on the hydrosphere, with particular emphasis on the role of plastics based pollution. During the course of this blog I hope to discuss a range of subtopics: pollution variation, environmental concerns, ecological concerns, current management schemes and future predictions.
Good start - I look forward to following your blog
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