Plastic is now an ingredient in your dinner. It is made of toxic chemicals which do not biodegrade even when they are broken into single molecules. Why would you put it in food?
What is a nurdle?
When plastic manufacturing plants make virgin plastic, they form nurdles: Small plastic pellets about the size of lentils. They are used in molds to form the plastic products we use, from wrappers on packaged foods to toys.
More than 250 quadrillion will be made this year: More than 60 billion tons of United States nurdles. One pound of plastic equals 25,000 nurdles.
How do they get away?
Since nurdles are so small, they frequently slip through cracks in doors of trucks which haul them and the actual molds which make them into usable products.
Plastics factories have fences around which nurdles gather by the thousands like snow drifts, wasted product influencing both price and the environment.
Harbors and storm drains have millions swirling in the water. When loaded into containers for shipping, nurdles fly through the air like dust devils and settle on the surface of the water.
Nurdles represent ten per cent of all plastic debris in the oceans. The United Nations (UN) states 13,000 nurdles are floating in every square mile of the ocean.
Can nurdles be harmful?
Absolutely. Nurdles absorb persistent organic pollutants (POPs), like DDT and PCBs, because plastic naturally absorbs oils. Chemicals which are no longer in widespread use are still available (persistent) in the environment.
When nurdles reach water, freshwater streams or the ocean, they absorb chemicals from the water.
Absorbing poison from the water sounds like a good thing, but it is not. Now, the nurdle is a concentrated poison pellet.
What are they hurting?
Birds.
Birds think nurdles look like food. Birds eat dirt and sand to help them digest food. Nurdles mix with soil and sand, where they appear to be large grains or seeds.
Since plastic is indigestable, the pellets linger in the bird’s digestive tract. Nurdles do not function in the way sand does in a bird’s gullet, effectively keeping the bird from digesting its food.
As they remain in the gullet, any poison absorbed by the nurdles is passed to the bird. Nurdles are an equal-opportunity killer: Starvation or poisoning.
Fish.
Small fish face bigger danger from nurdles than only poison. Nurdles look like fish eggs, a primary food source.
Because the pellets do not break down in the stomach, small fish develop digestive blockages from which they can starve or die of constipation. Tiny species, like shrimp, can die from ingesting a single nurdle.
Larger fish fare no better with nurdles. When they eat smaller fish who have eaten nurdles, they face the poison leached into the meat and the indigestable nurdle itself. Accumulated nurdles block big digestive tracts as well.
Water supply.
Waste water treatment plants and sewerage systems have no viable method to remove nurdles from water.
Since nurdles travel through the process unscathed, they, in treated water, are then released into the wild.
Greenpeace has found concentrations of nurdles in the Red Sea, Indian Ocean, Bay of Bengal, Pacific Ocean (including the gyre and off the Phillippine coast) and Atlantic Ocean.
Orange County, California discovered in 2001, 98% of their beach debris was nurdles.
Humans.
Small animals ingest nurdles, but humans would not fill a cereal bowl with them. Humans would enjoy a king salmon steak. Why not have a healthy tuna salad?
Large fish which populate human food stores are feeding on the small fish who do not know the difference between a man-made nurdle and a fish egg.
How do we keep from killing the marine wildlife?
Legislation.
California passed legislation requiring manufacturers, handlers and transporters to contain nurdles. The Ocean Protection Council specifically calls for zero discharge of nurdles into the environment.
Reduced consumption.
Choose to use less plastic. Humans each throw away 185 pounds of plastic per year. Curb consumption by any of these methods:
- Stop buying bottled water. Use a filter pitcher and a refillable bottle at home.
- Use fabric shopping bags.
- Refill plastic bottles of fabric softener and water.
- Recycle all HDPE and PET plastic bottles (milk, soda, water, detergent and shampoo bottles).
- Buy recycled plastic toys.
- Use glass. Glass is 100% recyclable.
- Use a bamboo or recycled toothbrush.
- Stop using bead exfoliating products. The beads are plastic and too small to be filtered out during reclamation.
- Stop chewing gum… waste is 100% plastic.
Correct disposal.
Do not pass by a discarded piece of plastic, regardless of location. All plastics which are not left in the environment can be properly disposed.
Keeping nurdles out of the environment is the only way to protect marine wildlife we use as food.
Have you ever seen nurdles on the beach? Did you know what they were? Can you agree to use fewer shopping bags and recycle plastic? What one plastic product can you cut out of your life altogether?
barkinginthedark
/ February 24, 2012yeah, but do you not like chicken nurdle soup? huh? this is a patently anti-amurican post 🙂 but in all seriousness we need to wise up about how we’re fouling our nest…and all of wildlife along with it. great post Red. continue…
Red
/ February 24, 2012Thank you, Tony. I know I am the anti-Amurican wench mucking up all the consumer-driven notions the founding fathers planted in this uninhabited, Columbus-discovered country. Sheesh. I should be flogged.
Red.
Androgoth
/ February 24, 2012Yes 🙂 lol
Androgoth XXx
Red
/ February 24, 2012ROFL! 😉
Gail Thornton
/ June 10, 2013This post just moved me to comment. I was a research assistant on the whale watch boats off the coast of Cape Cod. During the later Summer, I had the additional job of charting and counting trash in the ocean. The biggest culprit I saw were styrofoam c ups. All plastic damages all wildlife and ecosystems. I didn’t look for nurdles, they were probably too small and many to count. It’s frightening to me.
Gail Thornton recently posted..Interview with Poet Laurie Childree
Red
/ June 12, 2013It has always been frightening to me. I have see the damage they do, along with plastic T-shirt bags (like from the grocer), cups, straws (which is what the boy in the photo is plucking) and debris. I just wish I could convince more ppl to forgo the “convenience” and use less. xxx