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ABOUT the 2010 “Keep the Sea Free of Debris!” Art Contest and 2011 Marine Debris Planner

ABOUT the 2010 “Keep the Sea Free of Debris!” Art Contest and 2011 Marine Debris Planner

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ABOUT the 2010 “Keep the Sea Free of Debris!” Art Contest and 2011 Marine Debris Planner

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  1. ABOUT the 2010 “Keep the Sea Free of Debris!” Art Contest and 2011 Marine Debris Planner The artwork featured here (and in the 2011 Marine Debris Planner) are all original and created by students from across the United States in grades K through 8. Students were asked to answer two simple questions: How does marine debris impact you? What are you doing about it? Winners were chosen based on creativity, artistic presentation, relevancy to the theme, and how thoroughly students answered the two questions.

  2. Overall winner: “You Otter Not Litter” Marine debris impacts me because I care for the organisms which live in this environment. Now, I'm recycling and asking other kids at my school to do it too and the bottles, cans, and paper are being reused instead of being dumped in the ocean. ~Ektaa T. (CA)

  3. It impacts me because if a type of marine species goes extinct of the debris, it might affect the food chain. What I do about it is that when visiting the beach after I drink my juice boxes and water bottles I throw them in the trash can instead of the sea. ~Elaine L. (FL)

  4. In my picture, I am showing a boy picking up trash before it goes in the ocean because a fish might eat it and get sick. Also if you throw a can, the sea animals might get hurt. So please help save marine life by not throwing trash. ~Tricia J. (CA)

  5. Marine debris directly impacts marine creatures. Yet, every organism in this world is part of one, large food web. Even if one link is missing, all of us in the food web are affected. I recycle as much as possible, and also make attempts to reduce amounts of waste. ~Kimaya C. (CA)

  6. I do see people throwing garbage on the road and around sea beaches. Road side there are drains which are for rain water and that goes to sea, and with that the garbage. I make sure that garbage is thrown in correct bins. ~Krish K. (CA)

  7. Marine debris impacts me because when I go to the beach, I don't want to swim in dirty rubbish water. My family won't enjoy swimming in garbage. Whenever we are at the beach we clean up our mess and pick up any rubbish we see even if it's not ours. ~Dannia A. (HI)

  8. In real life, there is lots of trash in the ocean and sea turtles get confused and eat plastic bags and get killed because they thought it was a jelly fish. To solve that problem, I started doing more beach clean-ups. I have seen a difference already! ~Annika F. (CA)

  9. I will help every day to stop marine debris and help pick it up so our life day animals can live on forever so our future will have them on forever. ~William J. (VA)

  10. Having lived near the beach my whole life, I see how much marine debris can harm the environment. Therefore, I believe people should contribute more to keeping the oceans and beaches clean. To help out the community with the marine debris, I don't litter or add more trash to the beaches. I also participate in "Clean the Bay Day.“ ~Dani F. (VA)

  11. STAY TUNED for 2011 “Keep the Sea Free of Debris!” Art Contest and 2012 Marine Debris Planner Information on these will be posted on the NOAA Marine Debris Program (MDP) website (http://marinedebris.noaa.gov), MDP blog (http://marinedebrisblog.wordpress.com/),and new MDP FaceBook and Twitter pages launching in January 2011!

  12. Marine debris is “any persistent solid material that is manufactured or processed and directly or indirectly, intentionally or unintentionally, disposed of or abandoned into the marine environment or the Great Lakes.” NOAA SEFSC

  13. NOAA Marine Debris Program Established in2005 December 2006: Marine Debris Research, Prevention, and Reduction Act Mission: Support national and international effort; preventing, identifying, and reducing marine debris Ways to Learn More: MDP website – http://marinedebris.noaa.gov MDP blog – http://marinedebrisblog.wordpress.com/ Coming soon! MDP FaceBook & Twitter

  14. Mark your calendars! With a variety of tracks, themes, and session types, this conference will build new partnerships, further raise public awareness and support, and inspire follow-up actions that will take us closer to a world free of the impacts of marine debris. www.5IMDC.org 5th International Marine Debris Conference Waves of Change: Global lessons to inspire local action 20-25 March 2011 Honolulu, HI, USA

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