

The first book in the series is Dog Man, but you can read the books in any order.

And when he gains an unlikely side-kick, Dog Man and Cat Kid are double trouble for Petey’s evil plans. To curb the growing hazards, the study authors recommend switching to reusables wherever possible, as well as cutting up disposal gloves and snipping the straps off of single-use masks to prevent animals from getting entangled or trapped in them.The brilliant book series from author Dav Pilkey, creator of Captain Underpants! Dog Man is the crime-biting canine who is part dog, part man, and ALL COP! With all the same humour and fun of Captain Underpants, Dog Man is a brilliant series of comic-book style novels.ĭog Man is the ultimate cop – with the brain of a super-smart dog and the body of a super-strong cop, he is bound to outwit his arch-enemy, cat Lil Petey. That could be a tall order: A report published by Hong Kong–based marine conservation organization OceansAsia, for instance, estimates that 1.56 billion face masks would have entered the world’s ocean last year, part of the 8 million to 12 million metric tons of plastic that reaches the oceans annually.Īs the far-reaching impacts of COVID-19 litter on wildlife become more apparent over time, Hiemstra, of the Naturalis Biodiversity Center, and Rambonnet are relying on citizen scientists to help them continue monitoring the situation: At people from around the world can submit their observations of affected wildlife. “What this paper does is give us insight to the extent of the litter’s impact on wildlife, so we can make efforts to minimize the consequences,” says Anna Schwarz, a sustainable plastics researcher at TNO, an independent organization for applied scientific research in Utrecht, Netherlands. “Animals with plastic in their stomach could starve to death,” says Rambonnet, of Leiden University.

Pets are at risk, too: In Philadelphia, a domestic cat ingested a glove, and a pet dog in Boston that had consumed a face mask. The earliest reported victim was from April 2020: an American robin in Canada, which appears to have died after getting entangled in a face mask. They found 28 such instances from all around the world, pointing to a larger, global problem. They embarked on an extensive search, online and in newspapers, to collate examples.Ī perch found trapped in a latex glove (pictured) in a Leiden canal inspired two Dutch biologists to look into how discarded single-use PPE is impacting animals around the world. The find shocked two Leiden-based biologists - Auke-Florian Hiemstra and Liselotte Rambonnet - who wanted to know more about the extent of COVID-19 litter’s impact on wildlife. The ensnared fish was the first recorded wildlife casualty caused by COVID-19 litter in the Netherlands. In August 2020, volunteers cleaning canals in Leiden, Netherlands, chanced upon a perch - a type of freshwater fish - trapped inside a finger of a latex glove. The study is the first global documentation of the impacts of COVID-19 litter on wildlife via entanglement, entrapment and ingestion ( SN:12/15/20). Latex gloves and polypropylene masks which protect people from the coronavirus are exacerbating the plastic pollution problem when not disposed of properly and are causing wildlife deaths ( SN:11/20/20).

Wildlife and ecosystems around the world are suffering from the impact of discarded single-use COVID-19 protective gear, researchers warn March 22 in Animal Biology. An octopus off the coast of France was found seeking refuge under a mask. A hedgehog in England got itself entangled in a glove. A Magellanic penguin in Brazil ingested a face mask.
