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Citizen Scientists on 'Nurdle Patrol'

Nurdles come in various colors but are often clear or white plastic.
CREDIT JACE TUNNELL / U OF T AUSTIN
Nurdles come in various colors but are often clear or white plastic.

Last September, the Director of the Mission-Aransas National Estuarine Research Reserve in Port Aransas, Texas was walking along the beach when he came across a disturbing find -- millions of tiny, plastic pellets had washed ashore -- he’d stumbled across an apparent nurdle spill. Nurdlesare tiny, plastic pellets that are used as the base material for the manufacture of other plastic products.

He estimated there were about a million nurdles per mile, and they stretched for more than 30 miles. So, after asking around and discovering there was nobody really monitoring for this, he initiated a citizen science initiative, called the Nurdle Patrol, to get help from everyday people to not only remove as many as possible from the beaches, but to collect data so researchers know where they’ve wound up, and how such a spill will be distributed by natural currents. We're joined that man: Jace Tunnell is Director of the Mission-Aransas National Estuarine Research Reserve. And, we're also joined by Maya Burke, she is Science Policy Coordinator with the Tampa Bay Estuary Program, and a volunteer nurdle hunter.

Copyright 2019 WGCU

Julie Glenn is the host of Gulf Coast Live. She has been working in southwest Florida as a freelance writer since 2007, most recently as a regular columnist for the Naples Daily News. She began her broadcasting career in 1993 as a reporter/anchor/producer for a local CBS affiliate in Quincy, Illinois. After also working for the NBC affiliate, she decided to move to Parma, Italy where she earned her Master’s degree in communication from the University of Gastronomic Sciences. Her undergraduate degree in Mass Communication is from the University of Missouri at Kansas City.
Mike Kiniry is producer of Gulf Coast Live, and co-creator and host of the WGCU podcast Three Song Stories: Biography Through Music. He first joined the WGCU team in the summer of 2003 as an intern while studying Communication at Florida Gulf Coast University.