In the advertisement, it states, “Recent studies estimate that fish off the West Coast ingest over 12,000 tons of plastic a year.” This statistic highlights the severity of the problem and emphasizes the urgent need for action to address ocean pollution. Furthermore, the ad's clear explanation, related to the use of scientific evidence, reinforces the logical reasoning behind its call to…
“Marine debris is typically described as any persistent, manufactured, or processed solid material discarded, disposed of, or abandoned in the marine and coastal environment” (Richard C. Thompson 11). If this is the case, how does marine debris end up in and around the water? According to Kimberly Amaral with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, marine debris can reach the ocean three ways; being flushed down the toilet or washed down the drain, ultimately ending up in the ocean; an object getting carried down the landscape or swept into the sewer by rainfall; or items thrown off a ship, landing directly in the ocean (whoi.edu). There are also three major problems caused by this marine debris ending up…
The article “Trashing the Oceans,” by Thomas Hayden, which was published in U.S. News and World Report, states how the oceans are being polluted by the trash going within it. Another article “Managing Marine Plastic Pollution,”John H. Tibbetts, was published in Environmental Health Perspectives, demonstrates how the pollution is greatly impacting the ocean. The article “Trashing oceans” utilizes ethos, logos, and pathos in a superior manner as compared to “Managing Marine Plastic Pollution” because it holds factual information and draws the reader’s interest.…
In addition to the environment, marine animals mistakenly eat plastic bags due to people’s littering, which keeps killing ocean wildlife. The clean and blue oceans in California always attract tourists to spend time enjoying it during their holiday. Nonetheless, trashes littered by people gather together in the oceans due to ocean current, and plastic bags play a key role. As plastic bags dissolve, it forms a collection of marine debris, which forms Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Generally speaking, Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a lot of marine debris is collected together by the ocean current. People can distinguish this garbage easily, but marine animals don’t have this ability. According to California Coastal Commission, marine debris harms…
We have all heard about how we are killing our oceans and how the coral and fish are suffering. We also hear how we have to clean the beaches, use eco-friendly materials and do our part to help, but does anyone ever tell us what is really happening in the oceans or how to help? In the article “11 Billion Pieces of Plastic Are Ridding Corals with Disease”, published in The Atlantic in January of 2018, Ed Yong interviews two microbiologists, Joleah Lamb and Rebecca Vega Thurber, on how plastic is destroying our coral reefs. The plastic cuts off oxygen and light from the coral casing many different kinds of diseases. Thurber gives some solutions how we can help solve this problem. For example, controlling how much plastic is made locally and how we dispose of plastic that is used. Yong makes several points by using…
Are we killing our oceans? This is the proposed question of Dahr Jamail in his article Oceans of pollution. He details several environmental pollution issues facing the waters of the world, from large floating plastic islands to hypoxic zones in which sea life cannot breathe. His thesis is that humanity’s inability to deal with plastic waste is causing harmful problems in the ocean to rise, which could lead to serious negative effects on the planet. He conveys the current scientific consensus and directs it towards an audience that is unaware or ignorant of these issues.…
Mankind is poisoning the planet. Today, enough fossil fuels have been burned and enough forests have been chopped down to increase the highest concentration of carbon dioxide than any point in the past eight hundred millenniums. (528) In the article “The Acid Sea,” Elizabeth Kolbert wrote about how the polluted sea around Castello Aragonese provides us with a glimpse of our future oceans and how it interferes with the chemistry of the ocean. In the article “Our Oceans are Turning into Plastic … are You?,” Susan Casey discusses the negative effects plastic has on the environment. “The Acid Sea” and “Our Oceans are Turning into Plastic … are You?” did an excellent job with providing strong arguments and appeals to inform and persuade the reader that the world is deteriorating and reform is compulsory for the health of the planet.…
Often times, there are debates surrounding controversial environmental issues, such as global warming, deforestation and nuclear power. But then, there is little or no public debate on the impact of plastic bags on the environment. Plastic bags kill tens of thousands of animals every year. In the marine environment plastic bag litter is lethal, killing tens of thousands of birds, whales, seals and turtles every year as they often mistake plastic bags for food such as jellyfish (planetark, 2015). Various experts estimate that up to a million birds and 100,000 marine mammals are killed each year from plastic debris including bags (One Green Planet, 2015). It is estimated that between 500 billion and one trillion plastic bags are used worldwide each year ( One Green Planet, 2015). This means that plastic bags is serious environmental issue. Given this, we as sustainability leaders should start to think of a way to trigger some public debate on this issue. Sustainability is about…
In Ocean City, the amount of trash found along the shore has tripled over the last 3-5 years, according to studies found by City of Counsel of OC. The amount of trash has caused troubles in the ocean waters and on the land where tourists visit. It has become an ongoing problem to the community and its waters. This is a problem that needs to be fixed immediately. Also having recycling bins and trash bins put in more locations that are accessible for everyone will help keep the beaches and waters clean. The audience for this proposal is the citizens and tourists of Ocean City, MD.…
Climate change is a change in the usual weather. This could be a change in how much rain a place usually gets in a year or it could be a change in a place's usual temperature for a month or season. Climate change is also a change in Earth's climate. Weather can change in just a few hours but changes in climate can take hundreds or even millions of years. Plastic pollution in lakes and oceans affect climate change because it harms air quality and creates ocean toxicity. Plastic contributes to ecosystem disruption and habitat destruction. In my project I will be testing the water and shoreline in Kootenay lake to see how much plastic is polluting our lake.…
Recycling greatly benefits many aspects of the world, particularly the environment. Almost everything used in today’s society is manufactured from plastic (i.e. water/ shampoo/ mouthwash bottles, food containers, furniture, technology, etc.). Due to this, not recycling plastic can lead to many problems in our environment. Recycling plastic promotes the conservation of energy and natural resources. It also contributes to the decrease of water and air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. To add, recycling plastic can save landfill space, or structure…
World News by NBC News – “Study: Plastic in ‘Great Pacific Garbage Patch’ increases 100-fold” May 9, 2012…
More than 200 animal species are dying everyday because they are consuming plastic in the ocean. This paper will discuss the environmental issue of polluted oceans, the causes, and possible solutions.…
Listener Relevance Link: It is their home that I, and many of you, use for recreation. To swim, play, surf, scuba dive, boat, and other activities. It is also their home that the world is poisoning with pollutants and toxins every minute of every day.…
To promote the social awareness against ocean pollution a budget would need to be set aside. By the start of 2020 a group called the Ocean Cleanup is starting a plan to start cleaning the most polluted parts of the ocean and work their way down to the less polluted parts. Their idea is to create an artificial coastline that pulls plastics and contaminants to a “v-shaped array”, which is a hose with two arms to guide the trash to the hose. The artificial coastline is just long enough to catch floating trash and still allow fish to travel underneath unharmed. The best part is it is completely controlled by the ocean. There will be no electricity or oil to run the machines, this will also reduce the opportunity of oil spills to happen. It will be easily moved making it even more economically…