She was born in March.
Her world was once the most beautiful and remote place on earth.
Pihemanu. Aka Midway Atoll within Papahanuamokuakea.
She died in June.
She didn't have much of a name. A number, really. X310.
Tagged by devoted biologists, she became a statistic.
Laysan Albatross.
Died before fledging.
One of the most incredible birds on the planet.
Adults fly more than a million miles in their lifetime.
X310 did not get to soar over the Pacific.
X310 died like thousands, millions actually, of other seabirds.
Plastics float to the sea from Ohio, California, and all corners of the earth.
Plastics find their way into food webs and lead to deaths we do not see.
But many of us are now watching over the ocean in new ways.
Listen. Read. Check ocean sites and imagine a new way of living, plastic free.
X310's leg band is worn by a silly little Monkey named Fred.
Fred is a Monkey who means business.
He tells a good story and talks up and down the coast and all across the country.
He knows the world of X310 and asks all to take responsibility.
Kuleana in Hawaiian. Responsibility.
Responsible actions could have saved X310.
She was a beautiful young bird.
But there were no vets, no shelters, no humane societies protecting albatrosses.
No one, not even the most caring animal lover could have saved her when she ate plastic.
Everyone, each of us, could prevent future loss.
Live plastic free.
In memory of X310.
(See X310 Ocean Activity below)
2 comments:
Many thanks to Ron and to Fred for this poignant message and activity.
Very happy to have stumbled onto your site! Very inspiring to see the work that you are doing and your work with young kids. Do you need some sand from Down Under Down Under? Ie Melbourne, Australia?
All the Best,
Natalie,
Saltwater Projects
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