This is actually very good news. the material is not permanently impacting the surface waters which we rely on much more than obvious. I suspect that it is slowly working its may down through the water column to the sea bed were it can the steadily blended into the the mud. This returns it to geological process which will eventually handle all of it.
We still need to solve our dumping problem but at least there is a process in place that is handling it.
Of course we still have a poor understanding of the exact sources of this waste stream input. It may have been caused by illegal dumping in the first place. Do we have destination security? If one has been paid to dispose of a shipload of landfill, the middle of the ocean happens to be the most immediately profitable solution.
Ocean plastic pollution on decline but where exactly is it going?
By Jim Algar, Tech Times | July 1, 6:03 PM
http://www.techtimes.com/articles/9502/20140701/ocean-plastic-decline-but-where-going.htm
There's less floating plastic pollution in the Pacific,
sometimes referred to as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and in the
Earth's other oceans than scientists say they've expected to find -- and
that's a worry, they say.
Circular currents in the oceans gather up the floating plastic,
creating giant floating areas considered a potential risk to fish as
well as other marine wildlife.
An extrapolation from data acquired by a recent global sampling
expedition by research ships suggests 7,000 to 35,000 thousand tons of
plastic debris is floating in the world's oceans, much less than the
estimated 1 million tons data going back as far as the 1970s would
suggest should have been found, experts said.
Two Spanish research ships collected more than 3,000 samples from 141
ocean sites during a global cruise of more than 30,000 nautical miles.
While several theories have been put forward for the discrepancy in
numbers, the most likely one -- and the most worrisome, researchers say
-- is that the debris is slowly sinking into the ocean depths.
While plastic on the surface is bad enough, at least it can be
studied, they say; but if it's sinking and out of reach, the harm it may
be doing could be harder to estimate.
"The deep ocean is a great unknown," study author Andres Cozar of the University of Cadiz in Spain says.
"Sadly, the accumulation of plastic in the deep ocean would be
modifying this mysterious ecosystem -- the largest of the world
---before we can know it."
If it isn't sinking, another possibility is that it's being consumed
by marine wildlife, which means it could work its way up the food chain
to create a risk to human.
"The plastic pollution in surface waters can more easily interact
with the ocean life, because the surface layer of the ocean hosts most
of the marine organisms," Cozar says.
The research cruise found concentrations of plastic were greatest in
areas where ocean currents were slowly gathering up the floating
pollution.
Those areas included west off the United States, between Africa and
the U.S., to the west of southern South American and to both the west
and east of Africa's southern tip.
"We are putting, certainly by any estimate, a large amount of a synthetic material into a natural environment," says
Kara Lavender Law, who studies plastic pollution at the Sea Education
Association in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. "We're fundamentally changing
the composition of the ocean."
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