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NDS Malta -Fishing Wire - Debris Challenge 2023

St Pauls Bay start of the fishing wire challenge
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After the success of our Debris Challenge in August 2022 where we collected 10,000 cigarette butts from the bay outside our dive centre, we have decided to give ourselves another challenge.

2022 cig butt challenge

 

We have found a disused 19 litre bottle and decided to get to put it to use. 

The challenge is simple - we collect all the fishing wire we see when we are diving during 2023.

To see how much of an issue fishing wire is at our dive sites, we will collect all the wire we find during the year to fill our container (as long as it is safe to do so).

fishing wire challenge Malta

The Debris Issue - Fishing Wire

As a diver, we have seen our fair share of the damage done by discarded fishing line in Malta. From fishing line strangling sea grass and sponges, to entangled marine life. Diving opens up a whole new world, but also opens your eyes to the issue of ghost fishing. Ghost fishing is the term for all the discarded, abandoned or lost fishing gear in our environment, which, in addition to fishing line, also includes traps and nets. It's called "ghost fishing" because once left unsupervised in the sea, the material carries on trapping the marine life. 

Fishing line poses several issues when discarded into the sea. The line is a real entanglement hazard for the marine life, which can prove fatal. With the fishing hooks still attached to the line, it carries on ensnaring the fish when discarded in the sea. The hooks can break free of the line and cause further injury to the fish. The line is often attached to a fly (a heavy lead weight that helps the line sink). The weight can become trapped under rocks, the reef and in coral, moving back and forth in the surge, breaking the corals and wrapping the line around plants, strangling them and other marine life. 

So how can we help?

Fishing wire found on a dive

2023 Challenge

While removing fishing line from our dive sites might be a drop in the ocean (pun intended) in eliminating the issue of ghost fishing, we believe every little bit helps. If we remove what we can then we hope our dive sites will be a healthier place. We also want to bring focus to this issue and raise awareness, both within the dive community, and beyond. Often people don't know about the issues occurring under the water, and having these challenges helps bring attention to where it is needed. 

We also find a lot of divers have a passion for keeping our oceans clean, and want to find someone to complete a debris dive with.

We really enjoy our debris dives and the "challenge" of filling a mesh bag, and that great post-dive moment of seeing just what you pulled out of the ocean that should not be there. It's a great feeling and we are happy to share this with our divers. 

We don't know if we can fill a huge 19 litre water bottle with just fishing wire, but you don't know if you don't try. Every little bit helps. 

Debris Dive Malta

Fishing wire collected on a dive in February

Safety First

Removing debris from the ocean brings about its own risks and hazards and a diver needs to know and understand these risks. We love removing debris but a divers' safety comes first. Our dive staff are trained in removing debris (and what not to remove), and are happy to pass on this knowledge.

It is important to have the right equipment under the water, which can be taken on any dive. 

First, a mesh bag is needed to collect debris - our dive staff will happily bring along a mesh bag for you to use when diving with us if you do not have your own. 

Compared to other debris, fishing wire has its own unique risks when removing. It is an entanglement hazard for marine life, but also for divers as well, so care must be taken. It is especially important when untangling fishing wire to have a cutting tool available.

And lastly, gloves are needed when collecting debris to avoid cuts to the hands. During the summer thin gloves are adequate to provide physical protection, and then thicker neoprene in the winter to both protect the hands and provide warmth.

If you are diving with us and you would like to borrow gloves and a mesh bag during a dive just let us know and we will happily bring one along (and join you in collecting debris). 

What next?

We look forward to to challenge of filling up our 19l container during the year, and we will keep everyone updated. We are really excited to also engage our divers on our mission. 

We hope everyone simply carries a mesh bag with them on a dive and pick up any trash they see. We really believe every little bit helps. 

Ben and Susie after a Dive Against Debris in Malta

 

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