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Posted

That's not a nest.  That's a corpse.  The plastic was in the belly, forcing it to starve to death as there was no more room for food.  The plastic would not pass through.  The surrounding material is feather and bone.  2000 Km from human contact.  This is the garbage we throw in our oceans

Posted

fascinating.

so we may see evolution in action here. survival of the fittest. in terms of behaviour of course.

we will see the birds that choose not to eat plastic, survive.

it's amazing to see nature at work.

Posted

hmmm, that is certainly more of an eye opener.

I was lamenting a couple of weeks ago, a package that was made of paper and plastic all glued fast together. it was impossible to separate. I was very frustrated. I mean, even if I could separate them, we don't have separate bins for plastics here.

we should do. but we don't.  I think I need to lobby our council to sort it out. but they seem to be cutting their budget for garbage collection lately so it seems like an impossible task.

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