Abstract

You have probably heard that plastic pollution is becoming a big problem for the environment, and especially for the oceans. When a piece of plastic reaches the sea, the seawater and sunlight make it slowly fall apart into tiny plastic particles. These small particles are called microplastics and are even smaller than a ladybug—and sometimes not even visible. Scientists have found that many marine animals mistake these microplastics for food and eat them! But what about the animals in coral reefs? Many animals in reefs, including corals and giant clams, are fixed to the bottom of the sea and cannot move. So, they cannot escape from the microplastics that are literally “raining down” on them. Recently, we discovered that many of these coral reef animals are not only eating the microplastics, but the plastics can also stick on their bodies like flies on flypaper!

Highlights

  • You have probably heard that plastic pollution is becoming a big problem for the environment, and especially for the oceans

  • We discovered that many of these coral reef animals are eating the microplastics, but the plastics can stick on their bodies like flies on flypaper!

  • Microplastics are formed in the oceans when sunlight, chemical reactions, waves, and water currents break down large plastic products, called macroplastics

Read more

Summary

WHAT ARE MICROPLASTICS?

Think about how many plastic objects you use every day in your daily life—at home, at school, and even in your free time. Many plastic objects are used only for a few seconds and thrown away. This is why more and more new plastic needs to be produced every day

Microplastic in Coral Reefs
WHY ARE MICROPLASTICS DANGEROUS FOR OUR OCEANS?
FOOD WEB
MICROPLASTICS IN CORAL REEFS
EXPERIMENTS ON CORALS AND GIANT CLAMS
WHY IS THIS STUCK PLASTIC A PROBLEM?
YOUNG REVIEWERS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call