The kids in our youth group joined in a salt marsh cleanup last Saturday. One of the largest salt marshes in New England is on the Stratford/Bridgeport border, and it is federal land. Until a few years ago it was fenced off and people could not go out on it. And it was completely ignored.
The role of salt marshes in the environment are very important. The grasses and creatures filter the water, decompose dead animals and plants and clean the ocean. They tend to form in places where tides bring such waste to shore. Therefore, they are also places where trash collects.
Because the salt marsh in Stratford was ignored for a good period of time, a lot of trash began to collect there. LOTS of trash. Two years ago, the folks at CT Community Boating, headed by Chris German, began organizing yearly cleanups of the marsh, along with other area beaches. The first year they went in, the amount of trash was overwhelming. The next year it was not much better, for much of what they'd removed had been replaced by new trash. This year, it was still shocking.
Trash that has built up on one area of shore |
Plastic and styrofoam do not degrade, but the work of the waves and the salt marsh plants and animals do their best to break it down. What is left is teenier and tinier pieces of plastic and styrofoam. Little pieces that are impossible to pick up but which collect in piles, and also float back out into the water for fish and other creatures to eat. Sea animals have been found to have more and more plastic and styrofoam in their stomachs. The petrochemicals are found in their flesh. This includes the fish we eat.
I don't think I was the only one shocked by the sheer volume of plastic trash that had collected at the salt marsh. I came home and looked up a few statistics that shocked me even further. I found out that Americans use 2,500,000 plastic bottles an hour. I found out that Americans throw out 25, 000,000,000 (that's billion) styrofoam coffee cups a year. I found out that world wide, 60,000 plastic bags are thrown out every 5 minutes. Lots of plastic trash ends up in the ocean, pooling in areas called 'gyers.' There are gyers in the Pacific that have accumulated floating areas of trash twice the size of Texas.
Trash floating in the ocean |
It would be one thing if we could say, "Wow, we've made such a horrible mess. Let's clean it up!" But manufacturers still continue to create more and more and more plastic and we continue to use it (and then throw it away. In the time it's taken me to write this, around 180,000 new plastic bags have entered the waste stream. But "throwing it away" doesn't make it go away, as we witnessed firsthand on the shore last weekend. The problem just keeps getting bigger and the trash piles just keep getting bigger.
I've tried to reduce my own plastic use, but find it nearly impossible to avoid purchasing plastic in our society. Everything is wrapped, labelled, contained. Even bringing my own shopping bags to the store, I leave with them full of new plastic. It's hard to hold on to hope in the face of such overwhelming societal sin.
A broken plastic Jesus we found amonst the trash |
Almighty God, in giving us dominion over things on earth, you made us fellow workers in your creation: Give us wisdom and reverence so to use the resources of nature, that no one may suffer from our abuse of them, and that generations yet to come may continue to praise you for your bounty; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen
No comments:
Post a Comment