Young Scientist Spotlight: Boyan Slat

Even before Boyan Slat had a worldwide spotlight aimed at him, he was interested in science in a big way. In 2009, when he was 14, this teen from the Netherlands made it into the Guinness Book of World Records by simultaneously launching 213 water rockets (he had help from some Delft University of Technology students). That record has since been broken, but Slat hasn’t been resting on his laurels.

When he was 16, he went diving off the coast of Greece and saw “more plastic than fish.” His passion for cleaning up world’s waterways began then and there. He began to research what it would take to accomplish this, and realized what a daunting task it would be with the traditional methods of using boats to drag nets to chase after the plastic.

Instead, he devised a passive concentration plan, using the ocean’s currents which already converge into gigantic “garbage patches.” His idea was to let those ocean currents bring the plastic to the nets. He gave a TEDx talk in 2012, but his idea didn’t catch on right away. So he took a risk.

After just six months into his university studies at TU Delft, he left school and started The Ocean Cleanup. By 2015, he had completed a research expedition to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and had begun scale model testing of his concept. In 2016, the first prototype went into the North Sea. As with most prototypes, it needed some design tweaks, such as using smaller collectors, and more of them, instead of fewer, larger ones.

In 2018, the first system was launched in the Pacific Ocean. It also experienced difficulties, but the group took what they learned to make improvements. By December of 2019, they were successfully removing plastic from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

How exactly does it work? A plastic barrier floating on the ocean’s surface has a three meter deep screen below it, which will trap plastic without disturbing the marine life below. Sensors and transmitters are attached, so it can communicate via satellites to a ship that will collect the garbage every few months.

And what happens to all that plastic that comes out of the water? The plan is to recycle it into products that can be sold, which will then fund the continuation of the project. The goal is that by September 2020, the first products made out of plastic from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch will be available.

Contrary to its name, The Ocean Cleanup is also working on getting garbage out of rivers. Since most of the trash in the ocean gets there from rivers, it’s a good proactive move. Check out the HABLOG post about cleaning rivers here.

Of course, there are always critics. Some people feel that this plan doesn’t do enough to reduce the plastics that enter our waterways in the first place, or address the culture of disposability. Slat isn’t fazed by this. He feels that instead of being an either-or situation, efforts need to be made on both ends. Minimizing plastic use from the beginning is vital, but taking care of what’s already out there matters, too.

Follow Boyan Slat on Twitter here.

 

Curriculum Reference Links

  • Chemical World / Sustainability / 10:  Students should be able to evaluate how humans contribute to sustainability through the extraction, use, disposal, and recycling of materials
  • Nature of Science / Science in Society / 10:   Students should be able to appreciate the role of science in society; and its personal, social, and global importance; and how society influences scientific research.


Young Scientist Spotlight:
HANNAH HERBST

10 Fun Facts: The Hab

1. Aquarius is the the world’s only permanent undersea research station.

2. Most missions last about two or three weeks.

3. Fabien Cousteau, grandson of Jacques Cousteau, beat his grandfather’s record month-long underwater expedition by spending 31 days on the Aquarius Reef Base in 2014.

4. The lab is used by NASA, the US Navy, and researchers and educators from around the globe for training and research.

5. The internet connection is better in the Hab than at many places above the water.

6. You have to swim underneath the facility in order to enter it.

7. Crew members are called aquanauts (NOT aquaNUTS!)

8. In 1994, a crew of scientists and divers had to evacuate Aquarius and climb up a rescue line to the surface in 15-foot seas after one of the habitat’s generators caught fire.

9. Aquarius was featured in the comic strip Sherman’s Lagoon in 2012.

10. The Hab was originally built in Texas.

10 Fun Facts: Coral

1. Reefs usually grow up on the east shore of land masses.

2. Parts of a coral reef can be harvested to make medications to treat cancers and other illnesses.

3. A coral reef isn’t a single organism; it’s actually a community of life that lives and thrives in one location.

4. Only about one percent of the world’s oceans contain coral reefs. That’s about the size of France.

5. Coral reefs are the largest biological structures on earth.

6. Corals are related to jellyfish and anemones.

7. There are over 2,500 species of corals. About 1,000 are the hard corals that build coral reefs.

8. Reefs grow where there are stronger wave patterns and currents to deliver food and nutrients.

9. The Great Barrier Reef is 500,000 years old.

10. Most coral reefs grow just about two centimeters per year.

10. Most coral reefs grow just about two centimeters per year.

10 Fun Facts: Invasive Species

1. To be considered invasive, a species must adapt to a new area easily. It must reproduce quickly. It must harm property, the economy, or the native plants and animals of the region.

2. Some invasive species are introduced accidentally, but others are brought deliberately.

3. Ship ballast water transports between 3,000 and 7,000 foreign species daily around the globe.

4. The total loss to the world economy as a result of invasive non-native species has been estimated at 5% of annual production

5. Invasive species have contributed to 40% of the animal extinctions that have occurred in the last 400 years.

6. Rodents are some of the worst invasive species.

7. There are an estimated 50,000 wild ring-necked parakeets in parks across London and southeast England.

8. Black and Norway rats annually consume stored grains and destroy other property valued over $19 billion.

9. Northern Pacific seastars reproduce very quickly. In one area where they were introduced, their population reached an estimated 12 million seastars in just two years.

10. Starlings were introduced to New York in the late 1800s, as part of an attempt to bring animals that were mentioned in Shakespeare‘s work to America.

Alert: Cuteness Overload!

Cutest animal in the ocean? Keep your Sea Otter. Forget the Dumbo Octopus. Axolotl? Close, but no cigar.

The winner of the Cutest Sea Animal prize is the Leaf Sheep Slug.

Yes, a slug. This tiny (5mm) animal, found near the Philippines, Indonesia, and Japan, looks like a cartoon sheep covered in bright green leaves with pinkish purple tips.

Bonus: it’s one of the only animals that can perform photosynthesis, thanks to all the algae it eats.

Beat that.