Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 40 | Page 30

Plastic and the Plight of Sea Turtles By Sarah Burnheimer, Marketing Communications Coordinator, South Carolina Aquarium; photographs courtesy of the South Carolina Aquarium B  ags, bottles, balloons, and straws are not what you’d order off a menu; they are not the typical tasty snacks a sea turtle would go for, either. But with more plastic permeating our ocean environment, these items can become all-too-common dietary options for our beloved sea turtles. Take a plastic bag, for example. When floating in the water, it looks oddly similar to a jellyfish. A popped balloon, tending to shred into strips on one end, has the same disguise. When ingested—and turtles swallow them frequently—all this plastic can form an impaction in a sea turtle’s stomach, hindering any chance of survival if left untreated. With about eight million metric tons of plastic landing in the oceans annually, we can see why sea turtles confuse the tasty with the trash. 28