Beach litter on Fraser Island shocks USC students | UniSC | University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia

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Beach litter on Fraser Island shocks USC students

Green sea turtle hatchlings getting caught in rubbish were among the worrying discoveries by USC students conducting a major clean-up of Fraser Island’s beach front.

About 120 USC students and 10 staff members recently collected more than a tonne of rubbish from a 30km stretch between the southern tip of the island and Eurong.

USC Professor of Marine Science Thomas Schlacher said the students were surprised to discover that the stunning and treasured open eastern beaches of the World Heritage site were so heavily and widely contaminated by plastic litter.

“Once you start looking carefully it becomes obvious that dozens to hundreds of small plastic fragments cover virtually every square metre of the upper beach and the foredunes,” Professor Schlacher said.

“Almost half of all litter was deposited in the low dunes and hidden from view by spinifex grass which ‘masks’ the litter.”

The clean-up was inspired by concerns about the beach rubbish from second-year Animal Ecology students visiting the island for field studies as part of the degree’s Marine and Coastal Ecology course.

Professor Schlacher said it would now become a regular course activity.

“USC has a research and learning centre at Dilli Village, and as ‘users’ of the island, we wanted to make a positive contribution to the island’s environmental condition.

“It also seemed somewhat incongruous to us that thousands of people drive past rubbish items every day and nobody bothers to stop to pick up the obvious items.”

He said among the most unusual finds was a complete bed head, half a fiberglass tinny and a high-heel thong created by somebody nailing a wooden wedge to a standard thong.

Other items included plastic bags and drums, fishing and camping gear, ropes, seedling containers, plastic and glass bottles and computer parts.

It is estimated that most of the material had been washed ashore, including debris swept into rivers from recent heavy rain.

“It is possible to make sure that our treasured coastlines remain attractive and harm to marine life is reduced by being careful to discard all rubbish properly.”

— Clare McKay

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