Dead whale sparks marine fears in Thailand
Authorities will meet with those in the plastic bag to lessen the amount of plastic waste ending up in the ocean
By Apinya Wipatayotin
The death of a male short-finned pilot whale with a shocking number of plastic bags in its stomach in Thailand’ Songkhla province has sparked grave concerns about marine debris and the threat it poses to the marine ecological system.
The whale died on Friday, a few days after it was beached in Chana district on May 28, and drew wide public attention to yet another case of a marine animal ingesting human refuse after 80 plastic bags, weighing about eight ilos, were found in its stomach.
As a result, the Department of Marine and Coastal Resources is seizing on this opportunity to raise public awareness about marine litter, especially plastics, which are known to be responsible for the deaths of seabirds and marine mammals.
Jatuporn Buruspat, the department’s director-general, said on Friday, which was also World Ocean Day, that the agency will meet those in the plastic bag supply chain, including producers and users, to discuss how they can work to curb the amount of plastic that ends up in the sea.