Kills animals
Plastic emits
poisonous gases
Plastic lasts forever
Animals get enregled
Gets in the food
chain and comes
back to us
Why to reduce over use of
plastic
PLASTIC GHOST
Say no to
straws, cups
Say no to bottled
water of covers
Say no to plastic
bags or other
products
How to reduce over
use of plastic
Use reusable
bottles and cups
Choose plastic free
fibres like acrylic
or polyster
Bring your own bags
while shopping
Answers
Answer:
On a boat off Costa Rica, a biologist uses pliers from a Swiss army knife to try to extract a plastic straw from a sea turtle’s nostril. The turtle writhes in agony, bleeding profusely. For eight painful minutes the YouTube video ticks on; it has logged more than 20 million views, even though it’s so hard to watch. At the end the increasingly desperate biologists finally manage to dislodge a four-inch-long straw from the creature’s nose.
Raw scenes like this, which lay bare the toll of plastic on wildlife, have become familiar: The dead albatross, its stomach bursting with refuse. The turtle stuck in a six-pack ring, its shell warped from years of straining against the tough plastic. The seal snared in a discarded fishing net.
But most of the time, the harm is stealthier. Flesh-footed shearwaters, large, sooty brown seabirds that nest on islands off the coasts of Australia and New Zealand, eat more plastic as a proportion of their body mass than any other marine animal, researchers say: In one large population, 90 percent of the fledglings had already ingested some. A plastic shard piercing an intestine can kill a bird quickly. But typically the consumption of plastic just leads to chronic, unrelenting hunger.
Explanation:
Answer:
This one if everyone follow, then we will save our Earth as well as Our Lives
Explanation: