North Pacific Gyre
The North Pacific Gyre (also known as the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre) is a swirling vortex of ocean currents comprising most of the northern Pacific Ocean. It is located between the equator and 50º N latitude and occupies an area of approximately ten million square miles (34 million km²).
The North Pacific Gyre has a clockwise circular pattern and comprises four prevailing ocean currents: the North Pacific Current to the north, the California Current to the east, the North Equatorial Current to the south, and the Kuroshio Current to the west.
Waste
The centre of the North Pacific Gyre is relatively stationary region of the Pacific Ocean (the area it occupies is often referred to as the horse latitudes) and the circular rotation around it draws waste material in. This has led to the accumulation of flotsam and other debris in huge floating 'clouds' of waste which have taken on informal names, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, the Eastern Garbage Patch or the Pacific Trash Vortex. While historically this debris has biodegraded, the gyre is now accumulating vast quantities of plastic and marine debris. Rather than biodegrading, plastic photodegrades, disintegrating in the ocean into smaller and smaller pieces. These pieces, still polymers, eventually become individual molecules, which are still not easily digested.[1] Some plastics photodegrade into other pollutants. The floating particles also resemble zooplankton, which can lead to them being consumed by jellyfish, thus entering the ocean food chain. In samples taken from the gyre in 2001, the mass of plastic exceeded that of zooplankton (the dominant animalian life in the area) by a factor of six. Many of these long-lasting pieces end up in the stomachs of marine birds and animals.[2]
For several years ocean researcher Charles Moore has been investigating a concentration of floating plastic debris in the North Pacific Gyre. He has reported concentrations of plastics on the order of 3,340,000 pieces/km² with a mean mass of 5.1kg/km² collected using a manta trawl with a rectangular opening of 0.9x0.15m² at the surface. Trawls at depths of 10m found less than half, consisting primarily of monofilament line fouled with diatoms and other plankton.[3]
Some sources[4] have reported that there is a "floating continent" of debris that is roughly twice the size of Texas, however no scientific investigation, including Moore's, has verified this.
Occasionally, shifts in the ocean currents release flotsam lost from cargo ships into the currents around the North Pacific Gyre, leading to predictable patterns of garbage washing up on the shores around the outskirts of the gyre. The most famous was the loss of approximately 80,000 Nike sneakers and boots from the ship Hansa Carrier in 1990: the currents of the gyre distributed the shoes around the shores of British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and Hawaii over the following three years. Similar cargo spills have involved 29,000-30,000 plastic yellow ducks, blue turtles and green frogs bathtub toys in 1992 and hockey equipment in 1994. These events have become a major source of data on global-scale ocean currents. Various institutions have asked the public to report the landfall locations of the objects (trainers, rubber ducks, etc.) that wash up as a method of tracking surface waters' response to the deeper ocean currents.[5] [6]
The gyre is discussed in Alan Weisman's The World Without Us (St. Martin's Press, 2007) as an example of the near-indestructibility of discarded plastic.
References
- ^ Santa Barbara News-Press: "Great Pacific Garbage Patch."
- ^ Natural History: "Across the Pacific Ocean, plastics, plastics, everywhere."
- ^ Moore, Charles; Moore, S & Leecaster, M et al. (4), "A Comparison of Plastic and Plankton in the North Pacific Central Gyre", Marine Pollution Bulletin 42 (12): 1297-1300, 4 December 2001, DOI doi:10.1016/S0025-326X(01)00114-X
- ^ Berton, Justin (Friday, October 19), "Continent-size toxic stew of plastic trash fouling swath of Pacific Ocean", San Francisco Chronicle (San Francisco: Hearst): W-8, <http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/10/19/SS6JS8RH0.DTL>. Retrieved on 22 October 2007
- ^ The Times: "Plastic duck armada is heading for Britain after 15-year global voyage."
- ^ The Daily-Mail: "Thousands of rubber ducks to land on British shores after 15 year journey."]
- UNEP: World's Largest Landfill (pdf)
- Trashed: Across the Pacific Ocean, plastics, plastics, everywhere
- ACF: Plastics in the Plankton
- CNN: How sneakers, toys and hockey gear help ocean science
- The Problem with Plastic: Waves of Junk Are Flowing Into Food Chain
- "Plastic trash vortex menaces Pacific sealife: study" Reuters article from 11-5-2006
- "Continent-size toxic stew of plastic trash fouling swath of Pacific Ocean", San Francisco Chronicle, October 19, 2007
- Animated Pacific trash vortex showing drift of ocean pollution
- Plastic Turning Vast Area of Ocean into Ecological Nightmare
- Oliver J. Dameron, Michael Parke, Mark A. Albins and Russell Brainard (April 2007). "Marine debris accumulation in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands: An examination of rates and processes", Marine Pollution Bulletin 54 (4), 423-433.
External links
- LA Times special Altered Oceans
- Algalita Marine Research Foundation accounts of the North Pacific Gyre
- Best Life Magazine: Plastic Ocean
- Trashing the Oceans U.S. News & World Report 4th November 2002
- Greenpeace facts about the North Pacific Gyre
- NPR: Navigating the Pacific's 'Garbage Patch'
- San Francisco Examiner: Feds want to survey, possibly clean up vast garbage pit in Pacific
