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Get involved with ocean conservation

If Blue Planet II has inspired you to help our oceans, then you've come to the right place! Below we share some links and information on the issues our oceans face and how small changes you can make really can make a difference.

No one in the UK lives more than 70 miles from the coast.
Did you know?

And remember, the oceans connect us all so what you do doesn't just help marine life in and around the UK coast but will help our oceans globally.

Things you can do!

#2MinuteBeachClean

Simply spend just two minutes doing a litter pick down on the beach, or if you can’t get to a beach then a litter pick anywhere will help to improve your environment. You can even document your efforts online using #2MinuteBeachClean and share your efforts on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Be an ocean hero!

We’re inspired by Jan Wells, a very dedicated dog walker who committed to do a beach clean every day for a whole year!

And if you’d like to take part in a bigger organised event near you, check out http://www.mcsuk.org/beachwatch/ or https://beachclean.net/

In 2016, 6,000 volunteers cleaned 364 beaches by attending one of the Marine Conservation Society organised cleans!

Every year, around 8 million metric tons of plastic waste enters the ocean, where it can prove fatal to marine life.

Simple tips - to reducing your energy consumption:

  1. Turn off lights, TVs, computers, when not in use
  2. Turn down the heating when it's cold. Blankets and socks are good for you and better for the planet
  3. Burn renewable fuel (wood not coal)
  4. Walk or ride your bike and carpool if travelling greater distances
  5. Slow down when you are driving and keep tyres inflated to the right pressure. Turn off your engine if stopped for long periods
  6. Eat less meat, especially red meat. Cattle produce large amounts of methane (Phew!)
  7. Buy local and try growing your own food
  8. Use a washing line rather than a tumble dryer
  9. Insulate your home
  10. Choose renewable energy and/or get some solar panels
  11. Plant greenery on roofs, driveways, patios and windowsills
  12. Take a 'staycation' and avoid short-haul weekend city-breaks abroad
  13. Carbon offset your flights whether for business or for pleasure
  14. Recycle. Reusing rather than manufacturing from new materials saves energy

The problem with plastic

What on earth is a nurdle?

These tiny, lentil sized plastic pieces are by-products of various manufacturing processes and end up in our oceans in their millions as a result of mishandling and accidental spilling in industry.

These small pellets never go away, instead breaking down into smaller and smaller pieces, which in turn are ingested by birds and fish, entering into the foodchain with fatal effects. Image copyright: Clare McIntyre

If you find any nurdles, The Great Nurdle Hunt want you to log them on their website to help to show the scale of the problem and to understand more about their distribution.

Microplastics

Some of the world’s deepest living sea creatures have been found to have plastic in them. Researchers at the Scottish Association for Marine Science sampled creatures off the Western Isles and a staggering 48% were found with plastic in them, at depths of up to 2,000m (6,561.8ft). Read more.

These plastics consisted of polyethylene and polyester found in plastic shopping bags and clothing. Polyester fibres can reach the seas in waste water from washing machines and to add to the problem, many household and cosmetic products contain tiny pieces of plastics, known as microplastics. These plastics are washed down the drain when you brush your teeth, scrub your face or clean the house and can end up in our oceans as they are too small to be caught in water filtration systems.

The good news is that the UK government pledged to ban plastic microbeads by 2017 and there’s a free app, which can help you find out whether your face scrub or toothpaste contains plastics.

The Beat the Bead app scans barcodes on household and cosmetic products, checking whether they contain these harmful plastics.

Download the app for your iPhone or Android device.

Stop sucking!

Used for just a few minutes, plastic straws can take hundreds of years to decompose if not recycled.

Seabirds like these wandering albatross travel thousands of miles in search for food. Often mistaking plastic for food, this ends up in their stomachs and so in their young as well.

Read more about how some pubs have stopped automatically putting straws in their drinks.

If you eat seafood are you eating plastic?

Become a citizen scientist

Get spotting with Seabird Watch

  • The world's seabirds are in decline. By inviting eagle-eyed members of the public (you!) to spot guillemots and kittiwakes on sea cliffs, scientists are better understanding the populations in remote areas of the UK coast and further afield. Start spotting and report your sightings on the Zooniverse website!

Join the Big Seaweed search

  • There are over 650 species of seaweed on UK shores and scientists are keen to better understand distribution. In conjunction with the Natural History Museum you can download a free guide, which helps you to record a 5m plot of beach, logging the plants you saw.

Report your seagrasss sightings

Sharks lay eggs…

Take part in a water survey

Mammals are some of the most under-recorded species in Britain

Report a stranding

  • If you come across a whale, dolphin or turtle on a beach, follow this expert advice from the Cetacean Strandings Investigation Programme

Spotted a basking shark, marine turtle or jellyfish?

Join the conversation

Angel sharks in Wales?

Open water safety

Have you spotted an undulate ray along the Jurrassic coast?

Science and conservation while you dive

The British Seahorse Survey

Current research projects looking at British cetacean species

Spotted a dorsal?

Volunteer at the marine reserve Berwickshire

Guidelines to watching seals safely

Dr Lucy Quinn of the British Antarctic Survey team with a wandering albatross family. Image copyright: John Dickens

Learn more

Become an ocean optimist by taking United for Wildlife’s free online marine conservation course

Take a free online course with United for Wildlife