Animals eat the plastic. This remains in their stomachs, because it never degrades. If they eat too much, they die. Turtles die because they eat floating plastic bags in the ocean, thinking they are jellyfish.
Plastic pollution can harm animals in various ways, such as ingestion leading to blockages or internal injury, entanglement causing physical harm and drowning, and release of toxic chemicals when plastic breaks down, affecting their health and reproduction. This pollution disrupts ecosystems and food chains, impacting the survival of many species.
Yes, plastic can be hazardous to the environment and human health due to its non-biodegradable nature and potential to release toxic chemicals. Improper disposal of plastic waste can lead to pollution in oceans and harm wildlife. Reducing plastic use and properly recycling it can help mitigate these risks.
Learning Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System (WHMIS) is important to ensure the safe handling, use, and storage of hazardous materials in the workplace. It helps protect workers from potential health hazards and accidents by providing information on how to identify, handle, and respond to hazardous materials. Compliance with WHMIS also helps organizations meet legal requirements and maintain a safe working environment.
All animals are different when it comes to their behavior.
A cause and effect hypothesis is a proposed explanation stating that one phenomenon (the cause) leads to or influences another phenomenon (the effect). It suggests that changes in the cause will result in changes in the effect, allowing researchers to test and analyze relationships between variables.
An example of a primary effect is when an increase in the price of gasoline leads to a decrease in the quantity demanded by consumers.
If you throw plastics away in animals environments then a animal is likely to eat it and if it does the plastic won't digest because plastic never digest so the animal will die.
Plastic bags Killed the following celebrity animals Flipper, Nemo, and yes even Willie the whale!
Yes, plastic can be hazardous to the environment and human health due to its non-biodegradable nature and potential to release toxic chemicals. Improper disposal of plastic waste can lead to pollution in oceans and harm wildlife. Reducing plastic use and properly recycling it can help mitigate these risks.
yes it is poisonous
paper, plastic cardboard
EXPOSURE
yes, temperature does effect plastic if it gets to hot it can melt it.
Polluting the water where animals live can be hazardous for their health and their environment. They can die from harsh chemicals or trash that is emptied into large bodies of water.
It could erupt and kill the animals
Not all hazardous wastes are carcinogenic. All are however toxic to people, animals, and/or plant life. Anything labeled hazardous will need to be handeled properly.
Mercury is hazardous to humans and animals
type in on Google "animals eating plastic", and see what you get!!!!