Sunday, September 30, 2007
Saturday, September 29, 2007
Nearing Hilo
Septiembre 28-29 del 2007.
Friday, September 28, 2007
A turn to the left speeds things up...
Our noon position was 29 36 N, 153 24 W. Given the favorable winds and point of sail that keep us making between 8-9 knots, we believe our ETA Hilo will be the morning of Oct. 1.
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
September 25, 2007
It's Thomas Morton here. This morning at a little before noon we hit the middle of the 149th meridian and 32nd parallel and sailed right into the biggest field of plastic debris we've seen this entire trip. For the better part of an hour we were completely surrounded by a steady stream of garbage, ranging from fairly large fragments to fully formed buckets, water and motor oil bottles, and smaller ghost nets just below the surface. You honestly couldn't turn away for more than 20 seconds without missing something jaw-dropping float on by--although sometimes it was more like 5 or 10. It's safe to say that by 12:30 we'd seen more crap pass the ship than we'd seen over the entirety of any previous day out here. For a while I wasn't sure we'd ever see the end of it, which I can't say for sure we have even an hour later as I write this.
Ever since I first read about the patch, this is what I've pictured in my mind. In fact, up until this morning I'd say probably the greatest effect of this whole voyage has been to condition my mind to step away from its sensationalistic preconceptions and come to terms with the awful and unglamorous reality of plastic inundation. After spending two weeks focusing on the more-or-less invisible, to be brought face to face with the sea of endless flotsam I'd envisioned was far more affecting than I feel it would have been, had we just come straight to this right away instead of crossing in from the north. For all the flippancy with which I've been blabbing on about "Garbage Island" in the weeks leading up to this journey, this certainly puts a big, plastic cork in my pie-hole. Our noon position was 32 24 N., 149 24 W.
Soy Tomas Morton, esta manana un poco antes del medio dia arribamos al 149o. meridiano con el 32o. paralelo y veleamos justo dentro de la area mas grande de basura plastica que hayamos visto en todo este viaje. Durante toda una hora estuvimos completamente sumergidos en una corriente estacionaria de basura. Basura que hiba desde fragmentos medianos a grandes hasta cubetas completas, enteras y botellas de agua y aceite, inclusive una pequena red fantasma justo debajo de la superficies. Uno no podia, honestamente ni voltearse por unos 20 segundos sin perderse de algun desecho flotante, aunque habia veces que ni siquiera 5 o 10 segundos de distraccion se nos permitia. Con toda seguridad se puede decir que a las 12:30 pudimos ver mas desperdicios pasar por doquier por debajo o por los lados de la Alguita y esta ha sido la experiencia mas desagradable de todos los dias anteriores que hemos estado en la zona. Por lo pronto, no estoy tan seguro de si hemos visto el final de esto, por heyo no estoy seguro si una hora despues, cuando estube escribiendo esto, aun seguian pasado desperdicios plasticos.
Aun cuando la primera vez que lei acerca del parche, esta habia sido la vision que tenia en mi mente. De hecho, hasta esta manana diria que probablemente ha sido la primera etapa del efecto mas grande para condicionar mi mente un paso mas alla de esta sensacionalista preconcepcion y llegar a los terminos de esta horrorosa y nada elegante realidad de la inundacion del plastico. Despues de estar dos semanas enfocado en mas o menos invisible desperdicio, de pronto nos encontramos cara a cara con un mar que parece no terminar con la basura flotante que habia imaginado, sin embargo, esto es mas grotesco de lo que definitivamente habia pensado. Asi que me pregunto que habria pasado si hubieramos llegado justo a este punto en vez de llegar del norte. Por toda esta frivolidad con la cual habia hablando acerca de la "Isla del Parche" en estas semanas principalmente para este viaje, este hecho, ciertamente me ha puesto un gran tapon de plastico en la boca. Nuestro posicion de mediodia fue 32 24 N., 149 24 W.
NOTA: este mensaje fue escrito sin acentos.
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
The Rings of the Gyre
September 24, 2007
When we look at the surface pressure of the atmosphere in our area of the eastern north Pacific, which we receive daily from http://weather.noaa.gov/fax/ptreyes.shtml, we see a series of gyrating concentric circles that define the subtropical high known as the north Pacific gyre. These circles define areas in which the atmospheric pressure is uniform. We are coming to view these areas as rings of trash with different characteristics. The direction of the winds that drive our sails follows the rings in a clockwise rotation. When we were in the center ring, it was very hard to sail. Not only were the winds light, but they changed direction frequently as they spiraled down from the peak of the mountain of air above us. We mostly had to motor to get to the second band. The plastic in our trawls was in general made up of smaller fragments, indicating that they had been trapped inside the ring for a long time, breaking apart. We are now in the second ring of high pressure and are suprised by how much larger the fragments are that we are pulling up, both by hand net from the bow, and in our trawls. We theorize that the debris being hauled into the gyre goes through a disintegration process as it spirals to the center, where it may revolve for decades. See sample from 9-22 vs sample from 9-24.
9-22
Septiembre 24 del 2007.
Cuando hemos revisado a la presion superficial de la atmosfera en nuestra area de muestreo en el Noreste del Pacifico, el cual recivimos de http://weather.noaa.gov/fax/ptreyes.shtml, se ve una serie de giros erraticos en circulos concentricos que definen lo que conocemos en el Giro del Pacifico Norte como alto subtropical. Estos circulos definen areas en la cual la presion atmosferica es uniforme. Estamos comenzando a ver estas areas como anillos de basura con diferentes caracteristicas. La direccion de los vientos que dirigen nuestro velero sigue estos anillos en una rotacion en direccion a las manecillas del reloj. Sin embargo, cuando estuvimos en el centro del anillo fue muy dificil velear. No solo porque los vientos son ligeros sino porque tambien cambian de direccion frecuentemente como una espiral hacia abajo del pico de la montana arriba de nosotros. Ahora estamos en el segundo anillo de alta presion y nos ha sorprendido las altas concentraciones de fragmentos grandes que estan siendo empujados hacia el centro, tanto a mano usando una red de cono, como en nuestros sistemas de arrastre con red. Estamos teorizando que la basura esta siendo jalada hacia dentro del giro y aqui se esta llevando el proceso de una desintegracion. manteniendo un movimiento de espiral hacia el centro del giro, donde se puede mezclar por decadas. Vean la muestra tomada en Sept. 22 contra la muestra tomada en Sept. 24. Dado que nos hemos movido a una area de alta concentracion de basura plastica, ya anteriormente predicha por Dave Foley y su grupo, estamos encontrando frecuentemente mas desechos plasticos en fragmentos. Incluso este medio dia pudimos ver un leno grande de unos 4 metros de largo y unos 0.5 metros de diametro, totalmente cubierto de barnaculos. Los filmadores salieron en nuestro dingy y no pudieron pasar las olas sin dejar de ver plastico flotando, ellos agarraron una lata de plastico de aceite o una botella, trozos de cuerdas o fragmentos grandes de plasticos. Manana viajaremos todo el dia, abajo de la vela de popa (spinnaker) para llegar a la zona de muestreo solicitada para fitoplacton que esta en acelerado crecimiento donde la acumulacion de basura plastica ya existe.
Aloha desde el ORV Alguita
NOTA: este mensaje fue escrito sin acentos.
Monday, September 24, 2007
Styrofoam Cube
September 23, 2007
This morning we hauled up a large hunk of styrofoam sporting a six-foot-long tail of rope completely covered in pelagic barnacles. Some of the barnacles were bigger than any we'd seen on this trip so far--in one case nearly the size of golf ball--leading us to wonder at just how long this foamberg has been floating free to acumulate such growth. At least a couple of years, since a resourceful fisherman made a float of discarded, expanded polystyrene, that had perhaps been part of a floating dock.
This afternoon we received a request from Dave Foley, ghostnet tracker extraordinaire at NOAA to obtain phytoplankton samples from an area experiencing a bloom associated with marine debris. It seems that the "jumbo jet" of phytoplankton, buoyant diatoms known as Rhizoselenia that are up to 1mm in diameter may be associated with marine debris. Currently there is a bloom not far from our route at 31 20 N, 153 40 W.
We have programmed this waypoint into our navigational system and are looking at the best winds to sail there. Our fuel is limited, so we need to travel using our sail (wind) power.
Aloha from ORV Alguita
Septiembre 23, 2007.
Esta manana agarramos un cubo grande de fomi agarrado a una cuerda de unos 2.5 metros cubierta completamente cubierta de bernaculos palagicos. Algunos de estos bernaculos son realmente grandes, son los mas grandes que hemos encontrado a traves de varios viajes- en algunos casos su tamano es como el de una pelota de golf- esto nos lleva a preguntar que tanto tiempo habra estado flotando libremente en el oceano que ha podido acumular todos estos organismos y permitirles su crecimiento. Pensamos que por lo menos deben haber sido un par de anos, porque este puedo haber sido un artefacrto hecho por algun pescador y lo deshusaron. El poliestireno expandible puede haber sido parte de alguna plataforma flotante. Este cubo fue hayado en la siguiente posicion latitud 35o 00.037 N 145o 51.414 W.
Esta tarde recibimos la peticion por parte de Dave Foley, la persona encargada del seguimiento de las redes fantasmas por parte de la NOAA, acerca de tomar muestras de fitoplacton cerca de una area que esta experimentando un crecimiento ("bloom') asociado con la basura marina. Al parecer esta pluma de fitoplacton, diatomeas flotantes conocidas como Rhizoselenia que no son mas grandes de un mm en diametro, pudieran estar asociadas con los desechos marinos. Actualmente hay un crecimiento acelerado no mas alla de nuestra ruta a 31 20N, 153 40 W.
Hemos programado nuestro sistema de navegacion hacia ese punto y al mismo tiempo estamos buscando vientos fuertes para poder velear. Nuestro combustible es limitado, asi que tendremos que usar la fuerza del viento y nuestras velas para avanzar hacia nuestro objetivo. Nuestro posicion medio dia fue 34 53 N, 145 52 W.
Saludos, Aloha desde ORV Alguita.
Note to Holly:
Left off our email yesterday was our noon position: 34 53 N, 145 52 W-- Holly GrayORV Alguita Vessel Support Coordinatorvesselsupport@algalita.org424.212.9679
Sunday, September 23, 2007
Ghost Net
September 22, 2007
Bloggers: Dr. Lorena M. Rios Mendoza, Dr. Joseph Goodman, Captain Charles Moore
From Dr. Joeseph Goodman, Ship's Physician
The Ghost Net: When I was swimming toward the ghost net in the clam of the ocean I could see it right on the surface, but as I viewed the net up close, my wave action from just swimming near the ghostnet, caused the net to sink fast. It took about 10 mintues for this large collection of waste, mostly from fisherman to return to the surface. How much more is down there that we cannot see? We carry three solar powered satellite position transmitting buoys onboard from Airborne Technologies. I called Tim Veenstra at Airborne and received permission to deploy one of his valuable floating position transmitters. It was tied to the ghostnet and released at 36 37.208 N, 144 55.417 W. In the Northwest Hawaiian Islands, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration spends 2 million US dollars per year to remove 60 tons of derelict fishing nets and gear in an effort to save the critically endangered Hawaiian Monk Seal, over 200 of which have become entangled since records were kept. By the use of tracking buoys like the one we deployed, NOAA plots the location of congregations of these killers of 100 thousand marine mammals per year in the North Pacific, and coordinates retrieval efforts. Our noon position was 36 38 N, 144 34 W.
From Dr. Lorena Rios Septiembre 22, 2007 Hoy al igual que cada dia hubo algo especial, hoy encontramos una red o varias redes de las llamadas "gost nets" o redes fantasmas porque no necesitan al pescador. Bueno lo importante e impresionante es que encontramos toda esta serie de redes enredadas que simulaban un arrecife artificial en medio del Giro del Pacifico. Para todos fue impactante este encuentro y tambien preocupante, porque tenemos que hacer algo para no seguir danando a la naturaleza. Tambien encontramos mucho macroplastico y en los muestreos de arrastre con la malla llamada manta estamos encontrando altas concentraciones de microplastico. Hoy tambien nos sucedio un hecho incredible, vimos una pequena red con cuerdas, ola marcamos con dos boyas y cuando nos disponiamos a sacarlas del oceano, no las encontramos!, buscamos y buscamos y nada. Se lanzaron tres nadadores y nada no encontramos nada. La pregunta aqui es, tan rapido se puede mezclar el plastico en la subsuperficie del mar? Estara el mar sumergiendo la basura plastica?.
Student Questions:
Hi! My name is Leana and I am from George Washington high school on Guam. I am taking a marine biology class and we are currently learning about the effects of plastic in the ocean. The results of your manta trawl is scary. I just wanted to ask a quick question. What do you think our chances are of getting the plastic out of the ocean?
Saturday, September 22, 2007
Three Firsts!
September 21, 2007
We began seeing black footed albatross in an area, and when we approached, we found five adults and juveniles sitting together on the surface. This is the first time we have observed a group of albatross sitting together at sea. Two divers were able to swim up to the group, which immediately approached them with great curiousity. When one of the divers went below the surface, the birds flew. Evidently they are sensitive to being preyed on from below. Notice how small the diver's head is compared to the large albatross. Three firsts for the Gyre in one day, a mola mola, a humpback whale and a group of sitting black footed albatross. The desert has its visitors.
Que dia mas raro! Anteayer hablamos sobre el hecho de que el giro es como un desierto. Pues hoy, el desierto tuvo visitas de tres especies de animales bien grandes. Por la manana, una mola mola gasto bastante tiempo con nosotros, y dos tripulantes nadaron con ella. Por la tarde, una ballena jorobada,en su viaje de Alaska a Hawaii, nos acerco, y la seguimos un buen rato. Tambien por la tarde vimos un grupo de cinco albatros, pata negra, juntos en la superficie. Nunca habiamos visto un grupo aqui de ese especie que nomalmente vuela solo. Hoy tambien empezamos a ver mas y mas basura, y nuestros redes trajeron abordo muchas cosas hechas de plastico. Es impresionante cuantos animales una pequena flotadora de 13 centimetros puede guardar. Estamos mandando un foto de solo los cangrejos que sacamos de ella. Hoy tambien cambiamos rumbo para el sur y estamos marcando un curso de 195 grados magnetico para Hilo, Hawaii.
Friday, September 21, 2007
Deepest Plastic Trawl Ever
Today we conducted the deepest trawl ever looking for plastic debris. We used paired bongo nets, and let out enough cable for them to reach a depth of 100 meters. The bongo net looks like a pair of bongo drums, one meter in diameter each, but instead of a skin stretched over the mouth, a net extends behind each drum.
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Septermber 19, 2007
Last night's dive was begun in calm conditions, but before it was over the
wind was blowing 15-20 knots. The sea anchor held us on position very well
and it was no problem to dive with the boat nearby. We saw lantern fish,
miniature squid, ctenophores, and colonial creatures that looked like transparent worms. In general though, there was very little visible life in the water. The creatures were few and far between, reminding us that the
Gyre is the oceanic equivalent of a terrrestrial desert. After we finished our dive around 2300, we had bright lights on deck to organize our dive gear and we were visited by a storm petrel attracted by the lights. It landed on deck and even came inside the cabin before we picked it up and released it. We believe it was a Madeiran Storm Petrel, Oceanodroma castro, but we are
sending along two photos for the experts to make a positive identification. We then set sail with main and genoa jib and have been making an average of 6 knots for the last 24 hours. Our noon position on 9-18 was 38 12 N, 137 22 W. Our noon position on 9-19 was 38 13 N, 139 15 W.
Aloha from ORV Alguita
Los cuatro busos anoche empezaron en calma, pero cuando terminaron con el buceo, el viento venia del noreste a 15-20 knots. Tenemos una paracaida para ancla de 6 metros diam. que sirvio muy bien para mantener nuestro posicion con relacion a los busos. Durante el buceo, vimos calamar chico, peces con lanternas y ctenophora, pero en realidad hubo poco que ver,
recordandonos que esta zona corresponde a los desiertos terrestres. Las luces del barco trajeron un ave y mandamos dos fotos para ver si ustedes pueden identificarlo. Saludos de Alguita, y gracias por sus preguntas.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
1)Hola, soy Javiera de 6º basico de la Escuela Villa Centinela Sur que trabaja con el profesor Luis Pinto. Mi pregunta es para que necesita filtrar agua la profesora Lorena Rios? y si es agua solo de la superficie del mar. Gracias. Centro AquaSendas, CHILE
Hola Javiera, Necesito filtrar el agua de mar para retener en un filtro especial llamado GF/F, los solidos total suspedidos en el agua de mar y de esa manera analizarlos y ver si en estos solidos tenemos retencion de contaminantes organicos. A su vez, analizare el agua de mar para ver si es
posible la deteccion de estos mismos contaminantes organicos en el agua de mar o en las particulas que se hayan pasado del filtro. El agua que estamos muestreando es superficial. Tambien estamos atrapando microplastico con una red a la vez que tomamos muestra de agua y poder correlacionar la contaminacion si la encontramos en alguna de las fases, solidos, agua o
microplastico.
2)Hola, soy Escarlet, estoy en 4º basico de la Escuela Caleta Lenga. El profesor Luis me conto que un grupo de cientificos estan en un pequeño barco en el mar. Mi pregunta es donde duermen? y que comen? De donde sacan agua para beber?. Gracias AquaSendas, CHILE
pueden tomar las muestras. el espacio es de unos 7 m de ancho y 4 m de largo. Se pueden tomar a la vez muestras con una manta y una red mediana de 28 cm por 45 cm. y el sistema de filtracion de agua de mar. La comida es deliciosa, ya que nuestro Capitan es totalmente internacional y con muy buen gusto para la cocina. El conoce mucho de la cocina mexicana, asi que por mi parte estoy encantada. Se que los demas participantes tambien estan
contentos con la comida. El Alguita tiene su propio sistema de filtracion osmotica y produce agua dulce con el agua de mar, dado que este sistema permite el paso del agua pero retiene las sales.
Steve Vogel at Cabrillo Marine Aquarium wants to know the approximate size of the squid so he can help us identify it.
The squid was about 16cm in length.
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Second Day in the Eastern Garbage Patch
It is after nightfall and we are preparing for a night dive in misty rain and 1026 millibars of atmospheric pressure. During the day we collected debris, like a hard hat and a jar with food inside (very unappetizing). We also trawled for debris and along with disturbing amounts of plastic fragments and line, got an interesting squid, whose identity is a mystery. Maybe you know what species it is. We have successfully replaced the malfunctioning hydraulic pump on the auto- pilot, which is the cause for much rejoicing.
We took the dingy out and cruised around looking for things. We found jellyfish that looked like plastic and plastic that looked like jellyfish. It gets harder and harder to tell the difference between the two.
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
The Garbage Patch
Today was our first day sampling inside the Eastern Garbage Patch. We sampled the area around 37 33N, 136 W. Our neuston (surface) trawls pulled up great quantities of plastic fragments, a small fishing float, a toy tire, and Japanese oyster farm spacers, along with several pre-production plastic pellets. The film crew took the dingy and filmed under water. They picked up a life jacket encrusted with barnacles. We have had an autopilot failure, so we are having to steer by hand until we get it fixed. That takes a crew member away from the research, but at least everyone will learn how to handle the ship.
Monday, September 17, 2007
First Manta Trawl
September 16, 2007
Today we took our first water samples with the Manta Trawl, which is dragged along the surface behind the boat and feeds seawater through a mesh tube roughly the size of a can of tennis balls. The mesh filters out whatever is greater than a third of a millimeter in size. The results were shocking. Mixed in with lantern fish and small jellyfish were hundreds of pieces of plastic and various balls of fishing line and other debris. There were even pre-production plastic pellets, sometimes called nurdles that are used to make all the plastic objects we are familiar with. The weight of the plastic pieces was far greater than the sea life itself. We have not gotten to the area of highest concentration of debris, the so called "Eastern Garbage Patch," but the quantities of plastic we are finding rivals what we found there in 1999. We believe the debris quantity is increasing rapidly. Tomorrow we will take more samples, as we will be in the general area of the EGB we sampled in 1999 and 2005. After dark, when we finished sampling a weather front with wind and rain blew down on us and we quickly set the genoa jib and turned off the motor, sailing to our destination at 8 knots, the fastest speed on the trip so far.
Sunday, September 16, 2007
Day 6
Today we were able to sail without the engines for the first time. We used the genoa jib and the mainsail. The wind held steady at about 15 knots for four hours, and we were able to make about 6 knots over the ground. We are a day late, so we didn't stop to pick up any debris, but we saw a bottle and several pieces of broken plastic floating by. One of the questions that we have been discussing, is the significance of the habitat provided by plastic for sessile organisms and pelagic fish and crabs. You can see that there are lots of creatures, including fish in the attached photos of the derelict fishing buoy we pulled up. According to Dr David. Barnes, in his 2005 paper Remote Islands Reveal Rapid Rise of Southern Hemisphere, Sea Debris, "rubbish of human origin in the sea has roughly doubled the propagation of fauna in the subtropics and more than tripled it at high (>50o) latitudes." So what's wrong with the "propagation of fauna" on our trash in the ocean?
Aren't we just providing places for things to live? There are at least two problems with this. One is that plastic trash travels slowly on ocean currents, which allows the organisms attached to adjust to changes in climate and water temperature. They may end up colonizing areas where they were never known before and out compete local species. This leads to a loss in what is called "biodiversity." The second problem we have been
discussing onboard Alguita, is the limit on the ocean's primary productivity far from shore. Primary productivity refers to the fact that food in the ocean, like on land, starts with photosynthesis, the process of plants turning solar energy into food for other creatures. There is a limit to the amount of solar energy impacting the ocean surface each day. Filter feeding organisms come up from the depths each night to feast on this plant
bounty -- the eat it practically all up. If we are making habitat for billions of creatures that wouldn't have survived in the open ocean otherwise, are they robbing the filter feeders of the food they have come to expect each night over millions of years? Will our trash mean less zooplankton in the ocean? Not to mention the fact that the plastic actually has chemicals that can kill zooplankton directly.
Tomorrow, we will do our first trawls and associated water sampling.
Aloha from ORV Alguita
El reporte para el dia de hoy es el siguiente:
Por fin hoy pudimos velear sin necesidad de motores! Usamos la vela principal y una vela secundaria, el viento se mantuvo a unos 15 nudos por cuatro horas, con eso fuimos capaces de navegar a 6 nudos sobre la tierra. Estamos atrazados un dia, asi que no recogimos ninguna basura, pero vimos una botella y algunas piezas de plastico flotando. Una de las preguntas que estamos discutiendo es acerca del significado del tipo de habitat que el plastico provee a organismos sesiles, peces pelagicos y cangrejos. Como
ustedes pueden observar hay muchas creaturas, incluyendo peces en la boya que atrapamos, ustedes pueden ver la foto. De acuerdo con el Dr. David Barnes en su articulo del 2005 "Remote Islands Reveal Rapid Rise of Southern Hemisphere, Sea Debris". La basura de origen humano en los mares ha permitido al doble la propagacion de fauna en los subtropicos y mas de tres veces a altas latitudes (>50o)". Asi que la pregunta obvia es, ?cual es el error en la propagacion de la fauna en nuestra basura en el oceano?, ?Acaso
no les estamos provechendo de un lugar para vivir a los organismos? Hay al menos dos problemas con esto, uno es que la basura plastica viaja lentamente en las corrientes oceanicas por lo cual permite a los organismos pegarsele y aclimatarse a los cambios de temperatura del agua. Al final terminan colonizando areas donde ellos nunca estuvieron y compite con las especies locales. Como consecuencia esto lleva a la perdida de lo que llamamos "biodiversidad". El segundo problema que hemos discutido abordo de la
Alguita, es el limite de la productividad primaria en los oceanos lejos de las costas. Productividad primaria se refiere al hecho de que la comida , al igual que en la tierra, empieza con la fotosintesis, el proceso por el cual las plantas convierten la luz solar en comida para otras creaturas. Existen limites para la cantidad solar que impacta la superficie del oceano cada dia. Los organismos filtroalimentadores vienen de grandes profundidades cada noche para darse un festin de estas plantas y se comen practicamente todas. Si estamos haciendo habitats para billones de creaturas que no podrian
sobrevivir en el oceano abierto y si ellos toman la comida de los filtroalimentadores que ellos han venido consumiendo cada noche desde hace millones de anos? ?Estara nuestra basura creando menos zooplancton in nuestro oceano?. Sin mencionar el hecho de que los plasticos actualmente tienen quimicos que pueden matar al zooplancton directamente.
Bueno, manana sera nuestro primer dia que usaremos la malla llamada "trawls" y tomaremos al mismo tiempo una muestra de agua de mar para asociar ambos resultados.
Aloha desde el ORV Alguita.
Friday, September 14, 2007
Day 5, Bottles, Float, strap and fragments
We are now 350 miles from the Eastern Garbage Patch, an area of the North Pacific Gyre that accumulates a very high concentration of debris. We found our first stray fishing float yesterday afternoon, a 300 mm diameter black float with two ears for tying to. This is the most common type of float we have found on previous trips. Today we picked up two bottles, and when we stopped for a swim, we found a white packing strap tangled in our rudder, and Captain Moore took a small aquarium net and pulled out 2 small pieces of line and some small plastic fragments while swimming around the boat. As we stand on the bow, we can see plastic fragments passing by at a rate of about one every 5 minutes. We expect this rate to increase each day as we get closer to the garbage patch. We have finally gotten fairly consisten 15 knot winds from the Northwest and are motor sailing at 5.5 knots under staysail, blade jib and mainsail.
Thursday, September 13, 2007
Day 4, Debris!
Sept 13, 2007
September 12, 2007 10:55 PM
Today in the morning we had dolphins accompanying us. Two of them stayed longer than the others, jumping in front of the bow in the beautiful clear blue water. It was a great spectacle.
Hoy en la manana tuvimos dos hermosos acompanantes, dos delfines, que nadaron junto al Alguita. Saltando a la superficie de estas cristalinas aguas. Fue un gran espectaculo.
Question: How fast are you going?
Answer: We have had very little wind, so the sails are not enough and we are running one of our two engines to make 6 knots. We are currently off San Francisco. Our noon position was 36 09N, 122 19 W. We transferred fuel from our bladder tanks on deck today, 140 gallons of diesel. We have used about 200 gallons so far.
Question: What type of data will you be collecting?
Answer: We will find pieces or fragments of plastic objects and complete objects made of plastic floating near the surface. We will classify them based on their size, color and later at the lab at the University of the Pacific, Dr. Rios will analize them to determine the type of plastic we found. Also, we are taking water samples along with the plastic samples. This is the first time water samples for Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) have been taken inside the North Pacific Gyre. The idea is to compare the contamination found on the plastics with the contaminants found in the water samples.
Que tipo de data va a resultar de sus estudios?
Podemos encontrar plasticos en fragmentos o piezas completas de plasticos. Los clasificaremos de acuerdo a su tamano. color y posteriormente en el lab de la UOP los analizaremos para saber que tipo de plastico estamos encontrando. Asimismo, estamos tomando muestras de agua de mar y plasticos que nos encontremos. Este es el primer muestreo en agua de mar dentro del Gyro del Pacifico. La idea es poder contrastar la contaminacion encontrada en los plasticos con los resultados que encontremos en el agua de mar.
Todos los analisis analiticos los haremos en la Universidad del Pacifico , haremos extracciones e identificaciones y cuantificaciones, usando cromatografia de gases unidos a un espectrometro de masas.
PD.Este mensaje fue escrito sin acentos.
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Day Two!
Day Two, Activities
Today we took a noon sight of the sun using the sextant. Lorena filtered seawater for 3 hours to get enough for a column to run in her gas chromatography, mass spectrometer back at the University of the Pacific, and we dove and collected a moon jelly to look at in the tank. We are north of point Conception. Our noon position was 34 23 N. 122 01 W. While we were stopped for water filtering, several young fin whales swam close to the boat and gave us a good look.
Aloha from ORV Alguita
Dia Dos, Actividades
Aloha del barco Alguita
Monday, September 10, 2007
First Day at Sea!!!!
First Day at Sea
Primer Dia de Viaje
Saludos desde ORV Alguita,
Sunday, September 9, 2007
Bon Voyage!!!!
ORV Alguita departed this evening from Long Beach, CA for a three week research voyage to the "Eastern Garbage Patch." During the voyage the ships research team will collect samples to study the growing amount of plastic debris in the Pacific Gyre. Alguita is scheduled to arrive in Hilo, Hawaii in the end of September.
BON VOYAGE ORV Alguita!!!