logo
The birds on this tiny, remote island are so full of plastic their bellies crunch

The birds on this tiny, remote island are so full of plastic their bellies crunch

Yahoo23-05-2025

On a remote, crescent-shaped island surrounded by crystal-clear ocean live some of the most plastic-contaminated birds in the world. They have bellies so full of fragments, they crunch when touched.
Lord Howe Island — a speck of land about 370 miles off mainland Australia, home to just a few hundred people — is the breeding ground for tens of thousands of sable shearwaters: dark brown-colored, long-winged ocean birds with strong hooked bills.
Scientists from the ocean research group Adrift Lab have been visiting for nearly two decades to monitor these birds' exposure to plastic pollution. Every year they find more contamination, but this year was shocking, said Jennifer Lavers, a marine biologist and coordinator of Adrift Lab, who recently returned from the island.
Shearwaters were found with levels of plastic far exceeding anything the scientists had seen before. They discovered an extraordinary 778 pieces of plastic inside one chick alone, smashing the previous record of 403 pieces.
It 'left us all speechless,' Lavers said. The scientists are now trying to solve the mystery of why this year was so bad. Plastic pollution is on the rise but 'does that explain a doubling in 12 months? Absolutely not,' she told CNN. 'So there's something else going on.'
Seabirds are often referred to as sentinels for ocean health, and the story they're telling is alarming.
Global populations have declined 70% over the last 50 years as they grapple with multiple threats, including from invasive species, the fishing industry and climate change.
Plastic pollution is yet another danger and a particularly 'insidious' one as its impacts are so hard to detect, said Richard Phillips, a seabird ecologist at the British Antarctic Survey.
Lord Howe Island offers a unique natural laboratory for studying seabirds.
The shearwaters reliably come back to the same breeding colony each year , usually within inches of the same burrow, allowing scientists to track individual birds' progress. 'There's nowhere else in the world that I can think of where we could do a study like this,' Lavers said.
The scientists visit every April and May, when the chicks are leaving their burrows for the first time and preparing to take their first big migration to the Sea of Japan.
Shearwaters are nocturnal, so every dawn, the scientists go to the beach to find chicks that were too weak and emaciated to make the flight. They bring them back to the lab to examine them. 'We often see high levels of plastic in these birds,' said Alix de Jersey, a researcher at the University of Tasmania.
The scientists return to the beach at night to analyze the healthier birds getting ready to fly. They 'lavage' them using a feeding tube, gently pumping water into their stomachs to make them vomit up the plastic.
The process may not be pleasant, de Jersey said, but 'it's just fantastic knowing that that bird is starting its migration without this huge load of plastic within its stomach.'
Most of the plastic found in the birds this year was made up of unidentifiable fragments but they also found bottle caps, tile dividers and large amounts of plastic cutlery, de Jersey told CNN.
The plastic accumulates inside the birds' bodies and can form a kind of brick. The pollution is so crammed into some shearwaters, it's audible. 'You can hear the crunching of the bottle caps and the shards and things shifting and moving against each other,' Lavers said.
The scientists believe most plastic is ingested due to parents accidentally feeding it to their chicks, instead of the fish and squid that make up their usual diet.
Plastic may smell good to birds because of the algae that can coat it, said Matthew Savoca, a marine ecologist at the California Marine Sanctuary Foundation and Stanford University. 'Other times, birds may eat something that has already eaten plastic,' he told CNN.
Shearwaters are particularly vulnerable because, while some birds will regularly throw up what they cannot digest, shearwaters 'only tend to regurgitate when feeding their chicks. The structure of their gut also means that plastic items are retained for a long time,' said Bethany Clark, senior seabird science officer at the conservation group BirdLife International.
Scientists are still trying to unpick the health impacts; many are largely invisible.
The Adrift Lab scientists take blood samples and dissect the dead birds. This year, as soon as they opened up the shearwaters, it was obvious there were 'systemic issues,' de Jersey said. She found scarring on the birds' kidneys and hearts.
Plastic can block birds' intestines or cause starvation, but there are also 'sub-lethal' effects, Lavers said. 'They don't kill the animal instantly, but they do cause it to have a shorter life span (and) lots of pain and suffering.'
Big pieces of plastic can dig into the birds' stomachs, causing excessive amounts of scar tissue. Microplastics might pass through the birds but leave a trail of toxic chemicals.
The Adrift Lab team have even found eating plastic can cause 'dementia-like' brain damage in shearwater chicks.
Over the last decade, the team has seen a very consistent decline in the birds' body mass, wing length and other measures. Lavers used to consistently find chicks too heavy for her 1 kilogram scales (2.2 pounds), but now the very heaviest top out at about 800 grams (1.8 pounds).
What's happening to the birds on Lord Howe Island is 'truly troubling,' said Kimberly Warner, senior scientist at Oceana, an ocean conservation organization.
Global plastic pollution is only getting worse, especially as cheap, single-use plastics — the vast majority made from planet-heating fossil fuels — continue to flood the market.
An estimated 33 billion pounds of plastic waste enter the oceans each year, roughly equivalent to two garbage trucks-full dumped in every minute, according to Oceana. It takes centuries to break down.
Horrifying images of dead albatrosses with clusters of colorful plastic spilling from their bodies, turtles eating plastic bags and whales entangled in plastic fishing nets are testament to how this pollution is affecting marine life.
'It's a crisis, and it's rapidly worsening,' said Lavers, who is still reeling from what they found on Lord Howe Island this year. 'I don't have words. I don't know how to explain what it is that I'm seeing.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hardware, Software, Meet Wetware: A Computer With 800,000 Human Neurons
Hardware, Software, Meet Wetware: A Computer With 800,000 Human Neurons

Forbes

time40 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Hardware, Software, Meet Wetware: A Computer With 800,000 Human Neurons

The Cortical Labs CL1 biological computer with human brain cells. The world's first 'code-deployable' biological computer is now for sale. The Cortical Labs CL1 costs $35,000 and has 800,000 human brain cells living and growing in a nutrient solution on a silicon chip. Computer scientists can deploy computer code directly to these neurons, which have been integrated into a 'biOS' or Biological Intelligence Operating System with what the company says is a mixture of hard silicon and soft tissue. The goal, according to the companies' founder? Smarter AI that drops some of the A and adds more of the I. Maybe, eventually, smarter brains than the ones we currently walk around with. 'The only machine or the only thing that we know of that actually has true intelligence is the brain,' founder and CEO Hon Weng Chong told me when I interviewed him five years ago, while he was still using mice neurons. 'So we said, let's start with the basic building structure, the building blocks being neurons, and let's build our way up and maybe we'll get there along the way.' Our human brains have neurons connected together in hierarchies, and from that emerges intelligence and consciousness, he adds. This approach is similar to neuromorphic computing architectures, which attempt to mimic biological brains with silicon-based hardware, but of course different in that neuromorphic chips do not typically use actual living brain cells. Cortical Labs, based in Australia, says scientists can solve today's most difficult problems with their biological computers, which they say are self-programming and infinitely flexible. A key difference between biological computers and silicon-based chips, of course, is that biological computers last even less time. The neurons that ship with your CL1 will live for 'up to six months,' at which point you'll likely have to invest in a refresh or refurbishment which provides new neurons for continued compute. And yes, biological computers need food and water and nutrients, all of which are supplied onboard via a life-support system the keeps them at optimum temperature. Plus, it filters out waste byproducts of living human cells: the kind of work kidneys might do in a full living organism. A Cortical Labs chip under a high-powered electron microscope. You can see tight connections between ... More neurons and the silicon substrate, the company says. In some ways the CL1 is more like a space ship than a computer, because it's a self-contained life support system that requires few external inputs. A key difference: the need for external power. From the outside, though, you treat the CL1 as a typical computer. You can plug in USB devices, cameras, even actuators if you want your CL1 to control a physical system. (Which, frankly, human neurons are typically pretty good at.) And there's a touchscreen so you can see system status or view live data. Five years ago, Cortical Lab's then-CTO Andy Kitchen told me they were deploying systems with tens of thousands of neurons to hundreds of thousands of neurons, but that their roadmap included 'scaling that up to millions of neurons." Now Cortical Labs sees their biological computers growing to hundreds of millions of cells, and with different technologies, billion or trillion-cell levels. However, there's not a direct one-to-one equivalent with neuromorphic neurons in a silicon-based system, he added. Biological neurons are much more powerful, he says. Interestingly, communicating with physical human neurons in a biological computer is vastly different than writing computer code to an artificial computer. 'The premier way would be to describe your task somehow, probably through some sort of very high-level language, and then we would turn that into a stimulus sequence which would shape biological behavior to fit your specification,' Kitchen told me. Part of the difference is how to encode and communicate the problem, and part of the difference is that the CL1 neurons, like the ones in your brain right now, have some plasticity: they can essentially reprogram themselves for different tasks. Essentially, the neurons learn how to solve your problem, just like you learn how to do new things. You won't likely see CL1 systems in general use anytime soon: currently, the targeted customers are in medical fields like drug discovery and disease modeling, says IEEE Spectrum. There's the added value that scientists can perform experiments on a little synthetic brain as well. If all of this seems on the edge of creepy, or even right over, that's likely because it is. CL1 says they don't do any animal testing, although they did start with mouse neurons, and they say that the human brain cells in their biological computers are lab-grown. But clearly the first human neurons came from somewhere. Cortical Labs says customers have to get 'ethical approval' to general cell lines, and require buyers to have proper facilities to maintain the biological chips. What exactly that means, however, is unclear. Soon we may see physical system in the world, like humanoid robots, with partially organic components to their brains.

Clever Cockatoos Have Figured Out How to Drink From Water Fountains
Clever Cockatoos Have Figured Out How to Drink From Water Fountains

New York Times

timea day ago

  • New York Times

Clever Cockatoos Have Figured Out How to Drink From Water Fountains

Most birds go for ease when looking for drinking water. But the sulfur-crested cockatoos in the suburbs of Sydney, Australia, often prefer to quench their thirst with a challenging puzzle. In the city's western suburbs, some of the birds have figured out how to use public drinking fountains. The mohawked parrots deftly use one foot to twist the handle open while their other claw grips the spout. It's unclear why the cockatoos go to the effort of using drinking fountains when there are plenty of accessible water sources nearby. They don't seem to use them more often during hot weather. One possible explanation is that the task of operating the fountains is simply more fun than sipping water from the local creeks. 'If there is no super urgent need and you're not dying of thirst, then why not do something you enjoy?' said Barbara C. Klump, an author of a study of the birds published on Wednesday in the journal Biology Letters, and a behavioral ecologist at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior in Germany. It's not the first time cockatoos in this area of Australia have been seen cleverly manipulating urban objects for their own benefit. Dr. Klump and her colleagues have also tracked the birds flipping open garbage bins across greater Sydney, a socially learned behavior that has resulted in an arms race (or maybe a wing race) with human residents. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Heartbreaking Video Shows Fish Fleeing Huge Nets
Heartbreaking Video Shows Fish Fleeing Huge Nets

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Heartbreaking Video Shows Fish Fleeing Huge Nets

David Attenborough has become the voice we associate with all things beautiful in nature, but he's never shied away from showing the harrowing destruction that humans visit upon our planet. This, however, might be the biggest gut-punch he's delivered yet. In his latest documentary "OCEAN," Attenborough presents us with unique footage showing the devastating effects of bottom trawling on the seafloor, right where the action is happening. The filmmakers placed a camera underwater, showing us the actual view of the trawl net as it sweeps up countless poor sea creatures, who desperately try to out-swim their doom. It's an unprecedented look — but it doesn't make for easy viewing. "I have seen the bycatch on the deck of trawlers, but like everybody else, I had never seen what the trawl does underwater," Enric Sala, a marine ecologist who served as executive producer and scientific advisor on Ocean, told IFLScience in a recent interview. "Being at the level of the net and seeing all these poor creatures trying to escape the net, that's something that nobody else had seen." Bottom trawling is a widely used method of fishing that involves dragging an enormous net across the seafloor, ensnaring hundreds if not thousands of aquatic creatures in a single sweep. It's a blunt approach that doesn't discriminate between species. Most of the fish that get caught aren't even what the fishermen are looking for, but they perish anyway. "Over three-quarters of a trawler's catch may be thrown away," Attenborough narrates in the documentary. "It's hard to imagine a more wasteful way to catch fish." Trawling also ravages the seafloor itself, as the heavy chain or beam that keeps the net open smashes into any rock or aquatic fauna in its path, while dredging up literal tons of sediment. "The trawlers tear the seabed with such force, that their trails of destruction can be seen from space," Attenborough says. It gets worse. As the seabed is thrown up, so are the vast stores of carbon it harbored. A massive 2024 study estimated that some 370 million metric tons of carbon dioxide is released by bottom trawling every single year. That puts it "on the scale of global aviation," Sala said, which produces nearly a billion tons annually. In terms of both the greenhouse impact and the sweeping scale of the damage wreaked to local habitats, it's the ocean's equivalent to deforestation. One study estimated that bottom trawlers scrape 1.9 million square miles of seafloor per year, roughly equivalent to 1.3 percent of the entire ocean. "It's happening everywhere around the ocean, including in many of our protected areas," Toby Nowlan, the director and producer on OCEAN, told IFLScience. "The difference being that this is as destructive as bulldozing your local ancient woodland, or the Amazon rainforest." "If my local ancient woodland, Leigh Woods, was just bulldozed, the entire city would be up in arms, but this is what's happening underwater," Nowlan added. "The whole reason [people aren't up in arms about trawling] is that it's remained hidden from view." Not anymore. More on the ocean: Benevolent Orca Pods Are Adopting Baby Pilot Whales in an Apparent Effort to Clean Up the Species' Image

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store