Current:Home > ScamsIn New York City, scuba divers’ passion for the sport becomes a mission to collect undersea litter -前500条预览:
In New York City, scuba divers’ passion for the sport becomes a mission to collect undersea litter
View
Date:2025-04-15 16:44:08
NEW YORK (AP) — On a recent Sunday afternoon, the divers arrived on a thin strip of sand at the furthest, watery edge of New York City. Oxygen tanks strapped to their backs, they waded into the sea and descended into an environment far different from their usual terrestrial surroundings of concrete, traffic and trash-strewn sidewalks.
Horseshoe crabs and other crustaceans crawl on a seabed encrusted with barnacles and colonies of coral. Spiny-finned sea robin, blackfish and wayward angelfish swim in the murky ocean tinted green by sheets of algae.
Not all is pretty. Plastic bottles, candy wrappers and miles and miles of fishing line drift with the tides, endangering sea life.
The undersea litter isn’t always visible from the shore. But it has long been a concern of Nicole Zelek, a diving instructor who four years ago launched monthly cleanups at this small cove in the community of Far Rockaway, where New York City meets the Atlantic Ocean, about 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) south of John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens.
A throwaway culture of single-use plastics and other hard-to-degrade material has sullied the world’s waters over the decades, posing a danger to marine life such as seals and seabirds. By 2025, some 250 million tons (226.7 million metric tons) of plastic will have found its way into the oceans, according to the PADI AWARE Foundation, a conservation group sponsoring a global project called Dive Against Debris.
Dive by dive, small groups like Zelek’s have been trying to undo some of the damage.
“Every month we have a prize for the weirdest find,” she said. They have included the occasional goat skull, perhaps used as part of some ritual, Zelek surmises.
“The best find of all time was an actual ATM machine. Unfortunately, it was empty,” she said.
The divers’ haul one late-summer Sunday wasn’t much, but there were clumps and clumps of fishing line untangled from underwater objects. What the divers can’t pull away by hand is cut with scissors.
“Unfortunately, tons of crabs and horseshoe crabs — which are under threat — get tangled in the fishing line and then they die,” Zelek said.
While more ambitious projects are underway to scoop up huge accumulations of floating debris in deeper waters, small-scale coastal cleanups like Zelek’s are an important part of the battle against ocean pollution, said Nick Mallos, vice president of conservation for Ocean Conservancy.
“The science is very clear and that’s to tackle our global plastic pollution crisis,” he said. “We have to do it all.”
Every September, the conservancy holds monthlong international coastal cleanups. Since its inception nearly four decades ago, the cleanups have retrieved about 400 million pounds (181.4 million kilograms) of trash from coastal areas around the world.
The best way to combat plastics going into the oceans, Mallos said, is to reduce the globe’s dependence on them, particularly in packaging consumer products. But human-powered cleanup is the least costly of all cleanup options.
The Dive Against Debris project invites what organizers call “citizen scientists” to survey their diving sites to help catalog the myriad items that don’t belong in oceans, lakes and other bodies of water. By the group’s count, more than 90,000 participants have conducted more than 21,000 such surveys and removed 2.2 million pieces of junk, big and small.
Zelek and her fellow divers have contributed their finds to the project.
Surface trash might be easy enough to clear with a rake, but the task is more challenging beneath the water. Over the years, the layers of monofilament fishing line have accumulated. And until a few years ago, no one was scooping out the line, hooks and lead weights.
Untangled, a pound of medium-weight fishing filament would stretch to a bit more than 4 miles (6.4 kilometers). It’s anybody’s guess how many miles of fishing line remain on the channel’s bottom.
“Those small things are really what start to accumulate and become a much larger and bigger problem,” said Tanasia Swift, who has been with the group for a year and works for an environmental nonprofit focused on restoring the health of New York City’s waters.
“If there’s anything that we see that doesn’t belong in the water, we take it out,” she said.
While the drivers work, fishermen cast their lines from a ledge where the city’s concrete stops. The beach is frequented mostly by residents who live nearby.
Raquel Gonzalez is one such resident, and she’s been coming to the beach for years. She and a neighbor brought a rake with them on the same Sunday the divers were there.
“Needs a lot of cleanup here. There’s nobody that does any cleanup around here. We have to clean it up ourselves,” she said.
“I love this spot, I love the scuba divers,” Gonzalez said. “Look at all the good people here.”
___
Associated Press journalist Cedar Attanasio contributed and is a volunteer with the scuba team featured in this report.
veryGood! (93)
Related
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- 'Matt Rife: Natural Selection': Release date, trailer, what to know about comedy special
- 2 men released from custody after initial arrest in the death of a Mississippi college student
- Mississippi State fires football coach Zach Arnett after one season
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- Kel Mitchell Shares Health Update After Hospitalization
- Erythritol is one of the world's most popular sugar substitutes. But is it safe?
- Kids love it, parents hate it. Here's everything to know about Elf on the Shelf's arrival.
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- The Excerpt podcast: Supreme Court adopts code of conduct for first time
Ranking
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Negotiations to free hostages are quietly underway
- Russia jails an associate of imprisoned Kremlin foe Navalny as crackdown on dissent continues
- Liam Payne’s Girlfriend Kate Cassidy Reveals How She Manifested One Directioner Relationship at Age 10
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- House blocks Alejandro Mayorkas impeachment resolution
- 86-year-old man dies after his son ran over him repeatedly at a Florida bar, officials say
- March for Israel draws huge crowd to Washington, D.C.
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Ravens' losses come after building big leads. Will it cost them in AFC playoff race?
3 hunters dead in Kentucky and Iowa after separate shootings deemed accidental
Mercedes-Benz, Honda, Tesla among 48,000 vehicles recalled: Check car recalls here
Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
San Diego State coach Brady Hoke to retire at end of the season
House readies test vote on impeaching Homeland Secretary Mayorkas for handling of southern border
John Oliver’s campaign for puking mullet bird delays New Zealand vote for favorite feathered friend