10 Nov 2024
Sunday 12 May 2019 - 17:08
Story Code : 348555

World Migratory Bird Day highlights deadly risks of plastic pollution

World Migratory Bird Day highlights deadly risks of plastic pollution
United Nations Iran - Saturday marks World Migratory Bird Day which, this year, is raising awareness about the serious threats that plastic pollution poses to bird life, with a call for urgent measures to end the problem.


These include getting caught up infishing gear and other plastic debris; confusing plastic waste with food and eating it, which fills their stomachs and causes them to starve; and using debris as material for nest-building, which can harm their chicks.

One-third of global plastic production is non-recyclable and at least eight million tons of plastic flows unabated into our oceans and water bodies each year,said JoyceMsuya, acting Executive Director of the UN EnvironmentProgramme(UNEP). It is ending up in the stomachs of birds, fish, plankton, and in our soil and water. The world is choking on plastic and so too are our birds, on which so much life on Earth depends."

Discarded fishing gear is the biggest reason for birds becoming entangled in plastic, particularly seabirds, many of whom are not detected because they die far from land, out of sight of humans.

Digital technology shows full extent of pollution threat

Online tools have helped scientists to build up a comprehensive picture of the effect that discarded fishing equipment is having on birds.

Studies byPeter Ryan, Director of the Fitzpatrick Institute of African Ornithology at the University of Cape Town, have shown that almost all marine and freshwater birds are at risk of entanglement in plastic waste and other synthetic materials.A wide diversity of land birds, from eagles to small finches, are also affected, and these numbers areexpected to increase.

Research shows that about 40 per cent of seabirdshave consumedplastic.Thiscan kill them or,more likely,cause severe injuries, and plastic accumulations can block or damage the digestive tract or give the animal a false sensethat they are no longer hungry, leadingtostarvation.

UN action to reverse the trend

In an effort totackle plastic pollution, UNEP launched the Clean Seas campaign in 2017, which asksindividuals, governments and business to take concrete steps to reduce their own plastic footprints.

The Convention on Migratory Species, and the African EurasianWaterbirdAgreement (AEWA), which are backed by UNEP, work with countries to prevent plastic items from entering the marine environment. A recent resolution on seabird conservation, adopted by AEWA member countries in December 2018, includes a series of actions that countries can take to reduce the risk caused by plastic waste on migratory birds.

At the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Migratory Species in 2017, countries agreed to address the issue of lost fishing gear, by following the strategies set out under the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries. Efforts to phase out single use plastics and to redesign plastic products to make them easier to recycle are underway in many countries.

There are no easy solutions to the plastic problem. However, as this years World Migratory Bird Day underlines, everybody on this planet can be part of the solution and take steps to reduce their use of single-use plastic,said JacquesTrouvilliez, Executive Secretary of the AEWA.Tackling this problem globally will not only be beneficial for us, but also benefit our planets wildlife, including millions of migratory birds.


 
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