When it occurs in an environment they suspect it will happen in all environments. However, filmmakers need experts to prove this.
At each stage scientists are dispatched to analyze the results of some of the stories and their data is added to the overall report of the 5 turns.
At the Pacific Rim circulation center, our researchers discovered that plastic is more than plankton. The plastic ocean records the latest science and proves that as plastics enter the ocean it decomposes into small particles entering the food chain and attracts toxins such as magnets. These toxins are preserved in the adipose tissue of fishes and shellfishes and eventually are consumed by us.
Producer Jo Ruxton participated in an expedition called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch in the North Pacific circulation that is 1,500 miles from the coast of San Francisco to judge its influence. Joe knew that she had to start a plastic sea movie when the expedition found a floating microplastic instead of an anticipated solid that could accommodate it.
Joe worked at WWF International and worked with the director and journalist Craig Leeson. Their first collaboration was a documentary on Hong Kong's endangered pink dolphin.
They contacted experts around the world to learn about plastic contamination.
The team expanded to include Dr. Bonnie Monteleone, who discovered micro elasticity with other revolution investigated. She participated in the South Pacific circulation adventure
With the emergence of new information on the extent of the problem of each marine event, free diving champion Tanya Streeter joined the team. Together they have started global roaming for four years to investigate the plastic problem in the ocean and the impact it has on human health, including marine ecosystems and endocrine disruption.
The Plastic Oceans Foundation is a global charity organization aimed at changing the world's attitude toward plastic. This organization aims to limit the demand for nonessential plastics and to use the ocean as a touchstone to monitor the impact of such an artificial contamination crisis on human health.
Films like A Plastic Ocean and the great success of Blue Planet II will lead ocean plastic contamination to the forefront. Plastic is ubiquitous in the ocean of the world, and debris is found in the deep-sea ditch and the ice sheet of the Arctic. In addition, images of attractive animals that are consumed and intertwined with whales and tortoise plastics generally provide a powerful image of the problem. However, for all concerns of marine plastic, it is not the biggest threat to the marine environment. Climate change and loss of biodiversity, mostly caused by ocean overfishing, has been shown to cross the boundaries of each planet for the first time introduced in 2009. Recent studies also classify climate change and biodiversity as the boundaries of two core planets.
Due to plastic, marine marine organisms are dying every year. More than 100,000 marine animals die each year by entanglement and ingestion of plastics. Gianna Andrews is the author of "Form the Ocean for Human Health" in 2012. Chemical substances in plastics also harm marine organisms. By reducing the use of plastic, you can save thousands of marine animals and clean the sea. There are many questions about our ocean. What is the impact? How do you quit? Answering these questions will explain and explain our marine plastic
At the Pacific Rim circulation center, our researchers discovered that plastic is more than plankton. The plastic ocean records the latest science and proves that as plastics enter the ocean it decomposes into small particles entering the food chain and attracts toxins such as magnets. These toxins are preserved in the adipose tissue of fishes and shellfishes and eventually are consumed by us. Producer Jo Ruxton participated in an expedition called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch in the North Pacific circulation that is 1,500 miles from the coast of San Francisco to judge its influence. Joe knew that she had to start a plastic sea movie when the expedition found a floating microplastic instead of an anticipated solid that could accommodate it.