How Is Wildlife Affected By Monofilament Line?
 |
1. Entanglement
Animals can become fatally entangled in monofilament.
· While the animal is struggling the line tightens and cuts into
the animal's flesh. These cuts often become fatally infected.
· An entangled animal often cannot move freely or feed itself and
will starve to death.
· Entangled marine animals are trapped underwater and drown.
· Young fledgling birds can become tangled in line when their parents use
pieces of monofilament line to construct the nest.
(Photo courtesy of Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC)) |
2. Ingestion
Animals eat strands of monofilament line.
· Tangled balls of monofilament in the animal's gut obstruct digestion.
· Monofilament fills an animal's stomach and prevents it from feeling
hunger. In this situation the animal starves to death.
· Chemicals in monofilament may poison the animal.
· Large game fish, birds, and dolphin sometimes consume line and
fishing gear trailing off of a previously hooked fish, which causes internal
and external injuries subject to infection.

|
.
|
Sea Turtles are
known to ingest monofilament. The CMC reports finding a turtle with 590
feet of fishing line in its gut. "Turtles may be attracted to floating
semi- transparent plastic material that is mistaken for jellyfish. Plastics
can lodge in the turtle's intestines, causing death or decreasing absorption
from their gut." (Gramentz, 1988)
|
Entanglement in
monofilament is well documented for sea turtles. Fishing line wrapped around
a flipper will cut into the skin and cause potentially fatal infections
and can amputate the limb. A turtle can become tangled in line at the sea
floor and drown, or cause a type of asphyxiation where the animal stops breathing because it cannot get to the surface resulting in death but no, or little water, in the lungs. (Photograph courtesy of Julie Kraus 2007)

|
|
The endangered
Florida manatee ingests monofilament while feeding in sea grass beds. Pieces
of line once consumed lead to intestinal impactions and entangled small
intestines that result in death. "As of 1997 entanglement outdid boats
as the number one reason for rescues of manatees" (Ann Spellman, Marine
Mammal Entanglement Team, 2001.)

|
Discarded monofilament
line wraps around manatees' flippers and often leads to serious infection,
amputation, or death. "Numerous
free-ranging manatees have missing or scarred flippers from entanglements,
or debris still encircling one or both flippers." (Siriwong et al.,
1991, "Bonnie" photo courtesy of FWC)

|
|
Dolphins, although
nimble and highly intelligent, still become victims of monofilament ingestion
and entanglement. When a dolphin catches a fish trailing a hook and line
the dolphin will eat the fish and monofilament debris. Hooks and line have
been found in dolphin stomachs and regularly documented by scientists.
|
This is an
image of a dolphin's tail after it was entangled in monofilament. The deep
scars from the line are very clear. Infection from this type of entanglement
is not hard to imagine. A greater incidence of entanglement can be expected
with the continued rapid development of Florida and the increase in debris
pollution.
|
|
Birds that feed
on fish such as osprey, cormorants, and herons will ingest monofilament
incidentally as they consume their prey. Others that
scavenge for food such as gulls and vultures may eat potent smelling line
right out of the landfill. It is important to cut fishing line into small
pieces if you are throwing it out in the trash. (Photograph courtesy of FWC)

|
Pelicans, seagulls,
and herons, are the most commonly entangled birds. Anyone who fishes on
a regular basis has probably seen at least one entangled bird. Entanglement
leads to infection, limb amputation, and restricted ability to fly and hunt
for food which will eventually lead to starvation. To
learn how to handle an entangled pelican...click here. (Photograph courtesy of Howard Miller)

|
|