A turtle s shell protects its body and peanut was able to live with the plastic around her waist for a while but due to the deformation some of her organs failed to develop completely.
Six pack plastic rings turtle.
The eco six pack ring e6pr is a six pack ring made from brewing waste products and designed to replace environmentally problematic plastic rings commonly used to hold together cans.
In the fight to make the world a better place for creatures great and small the plastic rings that hold six packs of cans together have been a key battle point.
Though straws and six pack rings account for only a tiny fraction of all the plastic trash in the ocean images of hapless marine animals like sea turtles with plastic straws jammed into their.
You ve probably seen the heart wrenching photos of the damage plastic six pack rings can do to marine life.
Decades after being rescued from the plastic ring of a six pack holder the tenacious turtle is still alive and well each day helping to change the world for the better.
The ocean conservancy s 2015 ocean trash index which enlisted 561 895 volunteers to pick up 16 186 759 pounds of garbage also offers a few staggering facts.
Founded in 2013 by fisherman surfers boaters and people that love the sea saltwater brewery has always backed ocean based charities.
They tangle the wings of sea birds choke seals and warp the shells of growing sea.
Now they have created and are using edible six pack rings that help marine wildlife especially sea turtles.
The threat of plastic waste to marine wildlife is well known.
Saltwater brewery a south florida microbrewery was always about more than just beer.
The e6pr uses wheat and barley waste from breweries along with other compostable materials to produce their six pack rings.
The most ubiquitous image of its impact is that of seafaring turtles and gulls ensnared in the net like rings that yoke six packs of.
Billed as edible six pack rings the concept is aimed at eliminating those indestructible plastic six pack rings that kill countless turtles fish and birds every year.
People see her and learn her story and they get it peanut s handler amy wilkinson from the missouri department of conservation told the dodo.