The term animals can be applied to a number of life forms from krill to Blue Whales. Specific animal related death rates are occasionally developed for rare, endangered or "cute" critters, usually after an oil spill. The general animal deaths number has never been calculated.
To calculate the number it would be necessary to determine:
* Number of animals of the species alive at any given time. * Total mortality rate from all causes. * Percentage attributable to pollution. This is far more than a life's work. Additionally, the data would be changing as fast as you could collect it. And this is precisely the problem with assessment of the pollution of our oceans. Pollution is massive (consider the North Pacific Gyre), and there isn't a good way to "get a handle on it" in an attempt to affect changes. The problem is just "out there" and bringing it home takes massive effort.
There were no fish killed as a result of the Titanic pollution, as the ship sank in the North Atlantic Ocean and did not release any significant pollutants harmful to marine life in the area at the time.
It is difficult to provide an exact number of sharks that die each year from water pollution as data is limited and varies. However, water pollution negatively impacts shark populations through habitat destruction, poisoning, and disrupting ecosystems that are vital for their survival. Efforts to reduce water pollution are crucial in protecting sharks and other marine life.
Trash that is not properly disposed of can end up in landfills where it can leach harmful chemicals into the soil and water. Plastics can take hundreds of years to decompose, contributing to pollution and harming wildlife. Burning trash can release toxic chemicals into the air, worsening air quality and contributing to climate change.
Nobody keeps track of worldwide animal deaths each year. So lets do some estimating. For humans estimates range as high as 40% of the worlds deaths are attributable to non specific forms of pollution. The problem of arriving at a figure is to determine if pollution is directly, indirectly or marginally related to any specific death. Based on this rate, here is an estimate of the incidence of death among people now living in the world with the equivalent pollution related rates is 56.0 million deaths per year (from all causes) with 14 million/yr from some pollution related causes. There are more animals from people and so there is a larger number of animal deaths. animals have to eat the oil and they die from a horrible death so that is why we have to get rid of garbage island
Physical OceanographyPhysical oceanography includes such things as the formation of waves, salinity/density gradients, temperature differences and currents. Air/sea energy interchanges and related ocean-weather phenomena such as global climate change, El Nino, hurricanes and typhoons are special topics of ocean research that require a knowledge of both marine and atmospheric sciences.Chemical OceanographyChemical oceanography deals with the origins and fate of chemical constituents of ocean waters and the chemical reactions that take place in the ocean environment. The effects of contaminants, organic or inorganic and their distribution patterns, are major concerns of marine chemists. Chemical tracers, atmosphere/ocean gas exchanges are used to determine the movement and distribution of deep ocean waters and the cycling or uptake of gases such as carbon dioxide.Geological OceanographyGeological oceanography covers the study of the formation of ocean basins, mountain ranges, trenches, undersea volcanoes and how sediments are transported, uplifted and distributed into islands and continents. Findings arising from tectonic plate theories have led to new explanations of continental drift, movements of plates, uplift and mountain building. The discovery of hydrothermal vents has led to many new mineral and biological discoveries in the ocean. Much of the applied geological and geophysical research and surveys is directed to the location of offshore oil, gas and mineral deposits.Biological OceanographyBiological oceanography is the study of living things in the ocean, and the interactions of all of them with each other and also with their surrounding physical and chemical environments. . . It is concerned with entire communities and the dynamic ways in which they interrelate. One aspect of ecology that has grown into its own is that of the behavior of animals, including how and why they communicate with each other.
about 50,000 or more
Over nine thousand.
Sound waves are important for communication and navigation in the ocean because they can travel long distances underwater, allowing marine animals to communicate with each other and navigate through the vast ocean environment. Sound waves are also used by marine animals to locate prey, avoid predators, and navigate in dark or murky waters where visibility is limited.
There were no fish killed as a result of the Titanic pollution, as the ship sank in the North Atlantic Ocean and did not release any significant pollutants harmful to marine life in the area at the time.
It is important because than we know how much pressure is there.
Some of the sources of pollution where I live include industrial effluents into rivers, noise pollution from industries, and air pollution from paper manufacturing companies, and each negatively affect humans, animals, and plants.
It is difficult to provide an exact number of sharks that die each year from water pollution as data is limited and varies. However, water pollution negatively impacts shark populations through habitat destruction, poisoning, and disrupting ecosystems that are vital for their survival. Efforts to reduce water pollution are crucial in protecting sharks and other marine life.
It's very difficult to estimate the number of marine animals killed by humans each year, because the individuals aren't counted: the catch is measured in tons. Most estimates are that between 1 trillion and 2.8 trillion marine animals are killed by humans each year.
1. Why water pollution is a problem? Because, water pollution kills. It kills the fish and all living beings that lives in the water. If all the water life is dead so will much of humans food source will die too. 2. How Many People Pollute Each Year? Millions of people pollute each year. 3. How a ocean can get contaminated? water pollution, oil spills/leaks, people throwing litter into the ocean. 1. Why does water pollution affect all living beings? Because, contaminates our bodies and many of animals habitats.
It is estimated that around 100,000 marine animals die each year as a result of plastic bag pollution. This includes animals such as sea turtles, whales, and seabirds who mistake plastic bags for food or become entangled in them.
All marine animals are affected by ocean pollution such as, dolphins, whales, penguins, birds, fish and many more. Not only are the marine animals harmed but everyone needs water to survive, therefore everyone and every living thing is affected by ocean pollution.
This is pretty much impossible as there are millions and millions of creatures and plants in the ocean. And only a fraction of the ocean is explored. Our oceans are like our Universe. A mystery.