Plastic is so pervasive that I sometimes forget it's all around me—in toothpaste, in makeup, in clothes. But plastic is also omnipresent in places untouched by people, and one sobering forecast shook me: By 2050, it's likely that plastic in the oceans will outweigh all the oceans' fish. Some reports predict 850-950 million tons of plastic (the equivalent in weight of 4.5 million blue whales). Given all the plastic we've put into the oceans over decades—the present rate is 4 to 12 million tons of plastic per year—you might think some species will have adapted somehow, perhaps taking a liking to the synthetic polymers.
Well, Swedish researchers recently found that European perch larvae devour the stuff. "Naïve larvae that come across these plastic particles believe that it's a resource that they need to ingest large amounts of, almost like teens only eating unhealthy fast foods," says Oona Lönnstedt, a marine biologist at Uppsala University. "This is of great concern as larvae don't get any energy to grow if they only ingest plastic."
The plastic will all be recycled when Waterworld arrives.
(Score: 2) by butthurt on Wednesday October 19 2016, @04:32AM
Dead fish don't necessarily sink. Sometimes they float. Fish that die and sink don't necessarily become fossils. Some are consumed by benthic organisms.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benthic_zone [wikipedia.org]