No More balloons at Key Biscayne Beach Club

Help us ban balloons at Key Biscayne Beach Club. We hope to eventually extend this to all events on or near our Key Biscayne Beaches in order to protect our oceans and marine life. After we obtain enough signatures we will present them to the board of the Club and request action.
 

How many times have you attended a charity or school event to witness a balloon launch or slipped from a childs hands, and thought nothing of where the balloons have gone? The balloons are launched, float up in the air and eventually disappear from view but not from the environment. Most will burst, but whole balloon and balloon pieces will float back down, causing problems for wildlife.

DON'T LET GO!


Balloons kill wildlife.

Balloon litter floating at sea is deadly for many marine wildlife species.  Marine Turtles and some seabirds are particularly at risk, as they feed on prey that floats at the surface. They may mistake floating balloons for their jellyfish prey and swallow them, or become entangled and drown. Once swallowed, a balloon may block the digestive tract and eventually lead to death by starvation. Some whales, dolphins and fish are also known to have died as a result of eating balloons.

A juvenile green turtle washed up at Knott End-on-Sea beach near Blackpool, starved to death in December
Balloon found blocking gut of green turtle stranded near Blackpool, 2001 (C) Rod PenroseGreen turtle stranded near Blackpool, 2001 (C) Rod Penrose





             
 

2001, after a balloon blocked its gut. A male leatherback in a very poor condition stranded in North Carolina, USA in January 2004. The turtle was euthanased and the post mortem revealed that its gut had been completely blocked by plastic and an intact mylar balloon.

to have balloon releases banned under the Environmental Protection Act

"biodegradable balloons"

Most balloons are made from biodegradable latex (rubber), which degrades on exposure to air. A balloon industry-funded study concluded that latex balloons degrade at a rate similar to an oak leaf and cease to pose a threat at about six months. However, further studies indicate that balloons floating in seawater deteriorate at a much slower rate, with some balloons retaining their elasticity after twelve months. However long it might take for balloons to degrade, they can certainly stay intact in an animal%u2019s gut long after ingestion, and long enough to cause death by starvation.

36BalloontanglecropGB.jpg

Whether latex balloons degrade in six or twelve months, they persist in the marine environment and stay intact in an animal's gut long after ingestion - certainly long enough to cause death by starvation. The MCS annual marine litter Beachwatch 2007 report, sponsored by the Crown Estate, has shown that the number of balloons and balloon pieces found on beaches surveyed for Beachwatch, has more than tripled.

See more information at MCS website who is striving to ban balloons as part of their Dont Let Go campaign Nationwide.


  
petitie tekenen
petitie tekenen
Je hebt JavaScript uitgeschakeld. Hierdoor werkt onze website misschien niet goed.

privacybeleid

Door te tekenen accepteer je de servicevoorwaarden van Care2
U kunt uw e-mail abonnementen op elk gewenst moment beheren.

Lukt het niet om dit te tekenen? Laat het ons weten..