Great Lakes Plastic Pollution Survey 2012

Sherri Mason - Associate Professor of Chemistry at SUNY Fredonia. Since the ‘discovery’ of an accumulation of microplastics in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre in 1999 and recent events such as the 2011 Japanese Tsunami, marine debris has received increased attention and public awareness. To date,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mason, Sherri
Format: Moving Image (Video)
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/107719
https://youtu.be/w5tKum8KsKc
Description
Summary:Sherri Mason - Associate Professor of Chemistry at SUNY Fredonia. Since the ‘discovery’ of an accumulation of microplastics in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre in 1999 and recent events such as the 2011 Japanese Tsunami, marine debris has received increased attention and public awareness. To date, however, research and even public media campaigns have focused upon oceanic systems. Globally, the salt-water environs of our oceans do dominate the earth’s surface, but that water cycles through freshwater systems as it makes its way from sky to sea, accumulating our trash along the way. UN reports suggest that 80% of the oceanic debris comes from land, and it is perpetually postulated that litter makes its way to the oceans by way of freshwater systems, such as rivers and lakes. The Great Lakes represent the largest freshwater ecosystem in world and directly feed into the North Atlantic Ocean. Within the Great Lakes watershed there live 35 million people, most (if not all) of whom use and lose plastic. During the summer of 2012, Dr. Mason's group conducted the first-ever survey for plastic pollution within the Great Lakes system. In this presentation, Dr. Mason presented the results of their expedition, as well as a comparison to surveys conducted in the North Atlantic Gyre. Open