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"The plastic is a real killer of both turtles and birds," said Joshua Rose, natural resource specialist for the Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park. Seabirds like gulls, terns and pelicans, not very discerning diners, can get tangled in larger pieces of plastic or get smaller pieces lodged in their digestive systems, Rose said. At the national seashore, park rangers are going after the most immediate threats first, collecting plastic and steel barrels that could contain oil or hazardous chemicals. A hazardous materials team scheduled a daylong expedition down the seashore this week. Next, rangers will go for the big floating plastic bins that organize households. Lumber is a lower priority, and beachcombers like David Michaelsen may end up grabbing most of it. Michaelsen, 55, burned some vacation time to wander the debris field with tape measure in work-glove-clad hands. He is building a greenhouse for his wife and started looking for materials along the 60-mile-long free rummage sale. "I can take care of a few house projects, use my (time off) and clean up the beach all in one afternoon," Michaelsen said after dropping a large plastic lid
-- perfect drip pan for a leaky Jeep at home -- into the bed of his pickup. "The way lumber costs anymore, and this is just lying here."
Some unknown architects made a little shade on the beach by pounding some two-by-fours and plywood together. They furnished it with a few of the hundreds of plastic patio chairs on the beach and used orange spray paint to dub it the "Shark Shak." It was the perfect spot for J. Carl Lee and his Jack Russell terrier, Hunter, to stop for lunch. Looking around, Lee thought there could be a business opportunity for someone willing to mine the beach's plastic. He only saw one problem. "You wouldn't have enough trailers to pull all the plastic off this beach."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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