On the boat we have an ongoing science program which includes the Secchi 
disk which I haven’t had a chance to use yet and will include in later 
blogs, and also the plastic trawl which was brought on by Emily Penn, 
Adventure scientist who I am going to include an interview with in this 
blog.
We deployed the trawl into the water and jotted down the time and the 
GPS coordinates to show how long the trawl was in the water and how far 
it went. We’ve trawled twice so far, the first for 1 hour and a half 
which was a test as we did it while sailing past quite a large 
settlement called Sisimiut on route to Disko bay off west Greenland, so 
we expected to find a little bit of plastic anyway and the second which 
we did crossing over Baffin Bay for a longer 2 hours and a half before 
we pulled it up.
 
Emily deploys the trawl
We found quite a few very small fragments which were unfortunately 
clearly plastic on our first trawl. On the second, it was a lot harder 
to spot and we are still unsure whether there were clear plastic pieces. 
So now we just have to wait until we get back when Emily will send off 
the samples found by the trawl to be further analysed.
 
Nera and Emily examine what the trawl has picked up
Nera: What is the use of trawling for plastic?
Emily: It’s so we can understand how much plastic is in the ocean, where 
it’s accumulating, whether or not it’s breaking down, if it’s harming 
marine life, where it’s coming from, and how to stop more plastic 
getting into the ocean.
Nera: Why is it so important to complete trawls in the Arctic?
Emily: We have very little understanding on how much plastic is in 
Arctic waters so the samples we collect will build on that knowledge. We 
will be able to see how far into this remote region just how far our 
plastic has managed to reach.
 
this plastic fragment we found is less than 2 mm long
Nera: How can anyone get involved?
Emily: You can get involved by going to your nearest waterway (the sea 
or any river) and look at any plastics you find there. You can use an 
app called Marine debris tracker which allows you to log how much 
plastic you find and the types. You could also set up a plastic clean up 
with your local school.
You can also reduce your personal plastic consumption by thinking about 
single use plastic like plastic bags or drinks bottles which are 
designed to  only be used once.







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 La traduction française de cette page n'est pas disponible.



