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Teasers create interest in the full film that follows, while key messages are echoed to those who skip the full feature." "Life Below Water: The Arrival of a New Species" is supported by other videos of shorter length, :15 and :07 variants, organized in what GS&P calls "a proven tease, amplify and echo sequence. The World Wildlife Fund, and Australia's University of Newcastle, estimated we consume about five grams a week-a credit card. Last year, Consumer Reports claimed that Americans ingest 74,000 microplastic particles a year. Bonus silver lining: It makes them poop alcohol!) Some creatures they kill in instances where creatures don't die, it's too early to say what the effects will be, since plastic can't really be used by our bodies, or break down into anything nutritious. Whales and larger predators eat the things that eat them, and so do we. At an ocean exhibit in Paris's Natural History Museum last winter, microplastics were labeled a new species of microplankton-literally a new foundational basis of the current circle of life. And while treating them as a new species of organism seems melodramatic, it isn't just a clever piece of narration it's become a useful research distinction. And yet they travel-hundreds of miles, and live for thousands of years." "They have no brains, teeth or nervous systems. "Dominating every corner of the great sea, the ocean's newest inhabitants are making a permanent mark on life below water," Freeman begins.