Sat. Nov 2nd, 2024
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Thousands of items of rubbish, much of it old plastic, have washed up on one of Perth’s most popular beaches, and it’s from all around the city.

Among the many items found on Fremantle’s Bathers Beach was what is believed to be a plastic Coke bottle bottom of 1980s or 1990s vintage.

Doctor Linda Davies of Notre Dame University’s School of Arts and Sciences said people from all over Perth had contributed to the piles.

“This is litter that has been washed up on Bathers Beach that has been collected since February this year by the community members who are concerned about our litter pollution that we have,” she said.

“With most of the litter on the table being from June and July when the storms first hit.

Various small pieces of plastic, some yellow, some blue, some red, are seen in a plastic tub.
Some of the smaller pieces of plastic collected at Bathers Beach.(ABC News: David Weber)

“The storms are always going to wash in more litter, and wash in litter that has come from afar.

“Some of this stuff may have originated from near Fremantle but a lot of it would’ve travelled fair distances.”

The haul includes tomato sauce containers with use-by dates from 10 years ago, plastic and bamboo cutlery, pieces of underwear, small bags of unidentified drugs and McDonald’s straws.

An old photo of a fast food building on a beach

This McDonalds restaurant, pictured in the 1980s, fronted Bathers Beach for decades.(Supplied: State Library of Western Australia)

The McDonald’s straws weren’t recent deposits because the fast food giant has stopped making them, and plastic cutlery is harder and harder to find on dry land.

Dr Davies said that while some of the rubbish was from local businesses, much of it found its way directly into the ocean from the Swan River, often through stormwater drains.

“It shows the real importance of putting filters on our stormwater drains to stop this litter from coming through.

Dr Davies says storms brought the rubbish to Bathers Beach from a “fair distance”.(Supplied: Linda Davies )

“If you look at some of the litter that’s on the streets it will be very similar to what you see here so things like lollipop sticks you see sort of laying around quite frequently, I don’t see people having a lollipop on the beach but I’ll find lots of lollipop sticks washing up.”

Dr Davies has been conducting monitoring of litter levels at Bathers Bay, aiming to determine whether bans on single-use plastics are making a difference.

Seahorses changing the game

Those who are part of the project have been provided with keys so they can put the rubbish into a special seahorse bin on Bathers Beach.

A light blue plastic bin with the design of a seahorse is seen on a beach. Behind, a middle-aged caucasian woman smiles.

People are being encouraged to put rubbish they find into the seahorse bins.(ABC News: David Weber)

The seahorse bin has a perspex tummy, showing what happens when marine animals eat the litter.

While some of the collected refuse appeared to have come from fishers or fishing vessels, it was a relatively small portion.

A few bottles with lids on them seemed to have come from foreign vessels, if not foreign shores, given the labelling and unfamiliar types of plastic.

Beverage containers made up more than 20 per cent of all of the items found, representing the single largest percentage.

Piles of rubbish including ropes, plastic bottles and PVC pipes are sprawled out on a table.

All sorts of rubbish is found washed up at Bathers Beach.(ABC News: David Weber)

Eligible items have gone to the Containers for Change program to raise money for the local arts precinct, and rope pieces had gone to a specific art project.

Dr Davies said the discovery of a black plastic bottom from a Coke bottle was noteworthy.

A dirty brown round container is held up by two hands.

These plastic bottoms on soft drink bottles were phased out decades ago.(ABC News: Jon Sambell )

“These were popular in the ’80s and ’90s.

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