More than a third of the sperm whales found dead in the eastern Mediterranean since 2001 were killed by plastic debris, researchers from the Pelagos Cetacean Research Institute in Athens found.
Necropsies on nine of the 24 dead whales found in Greek waters revealed that their stomachs were filled with large amounts of plastic, The Times reported on the Pelagos analysis.
Marine biologists studying the carcasses said the animals likely suffered slow and “excruciating” deaths from the blockage.
One juvenile male found off the coast Mykonos swallowed more than a hundred items of plastic, including single-use plastic bags. One of the bags came from a shop in Thessaloniki, a city 500 miles away.
“The young whale suffered an excruciating death,” Pelgaos director Alexandros Frantzis told The Times. “We alone are accountable.”
“It’s alarming but not surprising,” Frantzis added. “The trend is bound to get worse because the amount of plastic waste in the Aegean Sea is growing.”
Sperm whales are considered endangered in the Mediterranean. Cetaceans in these waters face threats from high levels of ship traffic, pollution, human density, tourism and fishing, Lifegate noted.
Plastic waste has also become a problem in this marine region. A sperm whale found dead in southern Spain in February was killed after ingesting 64 pounds of mostly plastic garbage. Experts determined the whale was unable to expel or digest the trash, causing it to die from peritonitis, or an infection of the abdomen.
Death by Plastic: 64 Pounds of Trash in Whale’s Digestive System https://t.co/OB7fUI4BHL @savingoceans @PlasticPollutes
— EcoWatch (@EcoWatch) April 11, 2018
Plastic pollution is a worldwide crisis and, unfortunately, marine life bears the brunt of its harmful impacts. In Australia, a recent video shows four single-use plastic bags being pulled from the stomach of a tiger shark found in South Coast waters, the Northern Daily Leader reported. The shark, which appeared emaciated, likely confused the bags for squid.
The footage has sparked calls for a ban on plastic bags in Australia.
“We have to rethink how we use plastic,” marine biologist Murray MacDonald told the Northern Daily Leader after viewing the video. “The evidence is starting to mount rapidly that we just cannot throw away plastic as we have been.”
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