Progress and challenges in marine plastics pollution
June 30, 2020
Jennifers L. Lavers, Alexander L. Bond
Pollution of aquatic and terrestrial environments with plastic debris is rapidly becoming one of the most urgent, and widespread, environmental threats, acting as a lightning rod for community engagement and advocacy.
Despite growing awareness of this issue, governments and industry continue to invest in plastics manufacturing, through increased production and financial subsidies, which contributes to this increasing problem.
However, demand for many of these products stems from individual reliance on single-use items, relentless marketing, plastic packaging that is practically unavoidable, and a lack of understanding of appropriate waste management. Clearly, sustainable development will not be achieved without industry transformation, but addressing the needs and behaviours of individuals is also a key factor.
Recent publications
-
New distribution records of the coconut crab (Birgus latro) in eastern Polynesia on Oeno Atoll, Henderson Island, and Ducie Atoll, Pitcairn Islands
-
Plastic pollution as a canvas for change: fostering collaboration for environmental solutions and actions through art and science
-
Twenty years of the “radical middle ground” – our work has only just begun
-
A feathered past: Colonial influences on bird naming practices, and a new common name for Ardenna carneipes (Gould 1844)