Ghost Nets Gallery
Available as Prints and Gift Items
Choose from 37 pictures in our Ghost Nets collection for your Wall Art or Photo Gift. All professionally made for Quick Shipping.

Opah, Lampris guttatus. It's a endothermic fish (warm-blooded), with a rete mirabile in its gill ti Date: 25-Sep-19
Full Range of Prints and Gifts in Stock

Opah, Lampris guttatus. It's a endothermic fish (warm-blooded), with a rete mirabile in its gill ti Date: 25-Sep-19
Plastic bottle thrown to the beach after a long stay in the ocean. We are eating plastic on our seafood. Contaminated fish and shellfish have been found everywhere from Europe, Canada and Brazil to China - and plastic-eating fish are now showing up in supermarkets. While most plastic has been found in the guts of fish, and would therefore be removed before eating, some studies have warned that microplastics, particularly at the nanoscale, could transfer from the guts to the meat (and, of course, we eat some species of small fish and shellfish whole). There is growing concern about toxins leaching - laboratory tests have shown that chemicals associated with microplastics can concentrate in the tissues of marine animals. Some commercially important species have seen the majority of their population affected. It confirmed that contamination has been recorded in tens of thousands of organisms and more than 100 species. Last year, the European Food Safety Authority called for urgent research, citing increasing concern for human health and food safety given the potential for microplastic pollution in edible tissues of commercial fish. This photo is part of a set of several similar images from the same photographer. Azores 2019 Plastic bottle thrown to the beach after a long stay in the ocean. We are eating plastic on our seafood. Contaminated fish and shellfish have been found everywhere from Europe, Canada and Brazil to China - and plastic-eating fish are now showing up in supermarkets. While most plastic has been found in the guts of fish, and would therefore be removed before eating, some studies have warned that microplastics, particularly at the nanoscale, could transfer from the guts to the meat (and, of course, we eat some species of small fish and shellfish whole). There is growing concern about toxins leaching - laboratory tests have shown that chemicals associated with microplastics can concentrate in the tissues of marine animals. Some commercially important species have seen the majority of their population affected. It confirmed that contamination has been recorded in tens of thousands of organisms and more than 100 species. Last year, the European Food Safety Authority called for urgent research, citing increasing concern for human health and food safety given the potential for microplastic pollution in edible tissues of commercial fish. This photo is part of a set of several similar images from the same photographer. Azores 2019
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Bluntnose sixgill shark, Hexanchus griseus, eating bait. Can grow to 6 meters and is distributed by Date: 25-Sep-19
Full Range of Prints and Gifts in Stock

Fallow deer, Dama dama. Fawn. Females can become very cagy just before they give birth to their fawn Date: 25-Sep-19
Full Range of Prints and Gifts in Stock

Fallow deer, Dama dama. Female with fawn. Females can become very cagy just before they give birth t Date: 25-Sep-19
Full Range of Prints and Gifts in Stock

Fallow deer, Dama dama. Female with fawn. Females can become very cagy just before they give birth t Date: 25-Sep-19
Plastic slipper thrown to the beach after a long stay in the ocean. We are eating plastic on our seafood. Contaminated fish and shellfish have been found everywhere from Europe, Canada and Brazil to China - and plastic-eating fish are now showing up in supermarkets. While most plastic has been found in the guts of fish, and would therefore be removed before eating, some studies have warned that microplastics, particularly at the nanoscale, could transfer from the guts to the meat (and, of course, we eat some species of small fish and shellfish whole). There is growing concern about toxins leaching - laboratory tests have shown that chemicals associated with microplastics can concentrate in the tissues of marine animals. Some commercially important species have seen the majority of their population affected. It confirmed that contamination has been recorded in tens of thousands of organisms and more than 100 species. Last year, the European Food Safety Authority called for urgent research, citing increasing concern for human health and food safety given the potential for microplastic pollution in edible tissues of commercial fish. This photo is part of a set of several similar images from the same photographer. Azores 2019 Plastic slipper thrown to the beach after a long stay in the ocean. We are eating plastic on our seafood. Contaminated fish and shellfish have been found everywhere from Europe, Canada and Brazil to China - and plastic-eating fish are now showing up in supermarkets. While most plastic has been found in the guts of fish, and would therefore be removed before eating, some studies have warned that microplastics, particularly at the nanoscale, could transfer from the guts to the meat (and, of course, we eat some species of small fish and shellfish whole). There is growing concern about toxins leaching - laboratory tests have shown that chemicals associated with microplastics can concentrate in the tissues of marine animals. Some commercially important species have seen the majority of their population affected. It confirmed that contamination has been recorded in tens of thousands of organisms and more than 100 species. Last year, the European Food Safety Authority called for urgent research, citing increasing concern for human health and food safety given the potential for microplastic pollution in edible tissues of commercial fish. This photo is part of a set of several similar images from the same photographer. Azores 2019
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California sea lion, Zalophus californianus, with
California sea lion, Zalophus californianus, with nylon strings wrapped around his neck that caused him a deep wound. Hundreds of thousands of marine animals (fish, reptiles, birds and mammals) die every year in abandoned fishing gear in the ocean; cables
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Animal, Animals, Aquatic Pollution, California Sea Lion, Death, Debris, Discarded, Disgusting, Drama, Dramatic, Eat Plast, Entangled, Garbage, Ghost Nets, Mammal, Mammals, Marine, Marine Litter, Nature, Ocean Gyre, Pdo 040718, Plastic, Plastic Bags, Plastic Debris, Plastic Garbage, Pollution, Rubbish, Sea, Seas, Wildlife, Zalophus Californianus