The idea of a “biodegradable” plastic suggests a material that would degrade to little or nothing over a period of time, posing less of a hazard to wildlife and the environment. This is the sort of claim often made by plastic manufacturers, yet recent research has revealed supposedly biodegradable plastic bags still intact after three years spent either at sea or buried underground. So un-degraded were these bags that they were still able to hold more than two kilos of shopping.
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Paying fishers to release sharks accidentally caught in their nets can incentivise conservation action – but there’s a catch, writes Hollie Booth, University of Oxford
Sharks...
Scientists in Antarctica. Why They’re There and What They’ve Found
A media storm blew up in mid-March 2025 when a researcher at South Africa’s isolated Sanae IV base in Antarctica accused one of its...
‘Fishing for Freedom’ Tour Starts Tomorrow
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Another Fishing Tragedy
Another tragedy at sea has claimed the life of a well-known Mossel Bay fisherman whose ski-boat washed ashore east of Gouritsmond on Sunday.
The body...
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