Subscribe to Water News Network

Please enter your email below to receive updates from the Water News Network

The 90 Day Plan

Friday, October 29, 2010

Pioneering Researches Launch World’s 1st South Atlantic Ocean Plastic-Pollution Study

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Contact: Zan Dubin Scott
(310) 383-0956
zan@zdscommunications.com




Pioneering Researches Launch World's 1st South Atlantic Ocean Plastic-Pollution Study 

Pro Surfers James Pribram and Mary Osborne Join Voyage to Advance Research on Impact of Floating Pollution on Human Health & Marine Life

SANTA MONICA, CA; OCT. 27--Researchers will embark on the world's first voyage of its kind on Nov. 8 to show that every ocean on the globe is polluted with plastic garbage harming marine wildlife and potentially threatening human health. The 5 Gyres Institute, collaborating with Algalita Marine Research Foundation (AMRF) and Pangaea Explorations, is leading this expedition.

The 5 Gyres team, lead by co-founders Marcus Eriksen, PhD and Anna Cummins, will sail from Rio de Janeiro to Cape Town, South Africa on the first transatlantic Southern Hemisphere plastic-pollution research trip. The husband-and-wife team, overseeing a 13-member crew of researchers, journalists and others for the first global study of the problem, want the world to know that the scourge is not confined to a single mythical "Texas-size garbage patch."

"You can't cross an ocean today without finding plastic pollution," says Cummins, co-founder of 5 Gyres Institute, a Santa Monica, CA-based nonprofit organization.

A gyre is a rotating system of ocean currents where floating debris accumulates. Eriksen and Cummins plan to produce the first comprehensive snapshot analysis of plastic pollution in each of the globe's five gyres. Building on AMRF's discovery of plastic pollution in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, the 5 Gyres crew has discovered garbage patches in the North Atlantic Gyre and the Indian Ocean Gyre. No other researchers have been to as many gyres.

Two renowned professional surfers, James Pribram and Mary Osborne, will join the voyage to help raise awareness. "My goal is to share my experience with the world in becoming a spokesperson against plastic waste," says Pribram, a.k.a. the ECO-Warrior and O'Neill ambassador.

"We want to show people wherever we sail that the problem contaminates their international waters," Eriksen says. "They cannot say, 'Well, that's across the ocean, what does that have to do with my country?' "

5 Gyres' Rio-to-Cape Town voyage will be aboard Pangaea Explorations's racing sloop, Sea Dragon.  In addition to sailing through gyres, the team aims to advance its research into whether humans are being harmed by eating fish that have ingested plastic debris contaminated with persistent organic pollutants such as DDT and PCBs. PhD candidate Chelsea Rochman of UC Davis will lead this research. Cummins has already found trace elements of such toxins in her body. The crew will also analyze seawater for the same pollutants.

The Sea Dragon crew will be communicating via blogs with more than 1,850 Los Angeles school children through AMRF's Ship-2-Shore Education program. Charles Moore, AMRF's founder, first put the Great Pacific Garbage Patch on the map. 

Eriksen and Cummins plan to sail across the South Pacific Gyre—the fifth subtropical gyre—in March 2011.

5 Gyres is partnering with the United Nations Environmental Program's Safe Planet campaign and Eriksen and Cummins will be speaking at AMRF's 2011 Plastics Are Forever International Youth Summit and Training Program.

The Sea Dragon's crew: Clive Cosby, skipper; Dale John Selvam, first mate; Marcus Eriksen and Anna Cummins, 5 Gyres Institute co-founders; Stiv Wilson, 5 Gyres communications director; Chelsea Rochman, PhD candidate; Bonnie Monteleone, marine scientist; James Pribram, pro surfer; Mary Osborne, pro surfer and Patagonia Ambassador; Michael Lutman, filmmaker; Jody Lemmon, filmmaker; Rich Sundance Owen, Environmental Cleanup Coalition; Mary Maxwell, interested citizen.

5 Gyres's Rio-to-Cape Town sponsors include Chaco, Quiksilver and Ecousable.

About 5 Gyres Institute: 5 Gyres Institute is a nonprofit organization committed to meaningful change through research and education. 5 Gyres disseminates its message and findings through national lecture tours and raises awareness of ocean plastic pollution through voyages including that aboard JUNKraft, the boat built in 2008 of 15,000 plastic bottles. The organization's collaboration with Algalita Marine Research Foundation and Pangaea Explorations provide it with a marine laboratory and research vessel, respectively.  After studying the five subtropical gyres, 5 Gyres will monitor these vortexes through Traveling Trawl Program voyages which loan research equipment to volunteer "citizen scientists."

PHOTOS FOR MEDIA: Please use these photographs of Eriksen and Cummins on previous voyages, of plastic particles taken from a fish's stomach, and of James Pribram and Mary Osborne. Media Contact: Zan Dubin Scott, (310) 383-0956; zan@zdscommunications.com.

Follow our journey:  twitter.com/5gyres

http://www.facebook.com/5gyres

Free iphone app.-   5 Gyres.  

Zan Dubin Scott
ZDS Communications for 5 Gyres
O:  (310) 392-1130  C:  (310) 383-0956
F:  (310 392-1318

Stiv J. Wilson
Communications Director
The 5 Gyres Institute
mobile: 503.913.7381
twitter: @5gyres


90-Day Plan - 90 Ways to Save Water

Below the Surface - Atchafalaya River Expedition featured in Reader's Digest

Kristian Gustavson receives the American Red Cross "Hero of the Heartland" Award

David Gallo Shows Underwater Astonishments

Below The Surface Podcast

Robert Ballard's TED talk is an inspiring, optimistic look at the future hope of ocean exploration

Water News Network - Live Broadcast Studio

US EPA Water Science News

Be The Solution Shopping Center

Featured Videos

Daily Water News