Ocean plastic warning as woman finds candy wrapper and entire spoon in fish’s stomach

Woman highlights the horrors of plastic pollution as she pulls packaging, wrappers and even a SPOON from a fish’s stomach as she prepares to cook it in Indonesia

  • Anna Nurjanah, from West Java, bought a mahi-mahi fish at a local market
  • Her assistant was cutting the fish open when he saw something in its stomach 
  • Pair filmed as they pulled eight piece of plastic from the fish’s digestive system
  • A spoon, a candy wrapper, and a long plastic strap were among items inside 

A woman has revealed the horrifying amount of plastic she found inside the stomach of a fish as it was being prepared for a meal in Indonesia.

Anna Nurjanah captured the disturbing footage in the province of West Java after she bought the mahi-mahi fish from a market in the south of the island back in May.

Anna said that her home helper had been preparing the fish when he called her over to inspect the contents of its stomach, after noticing the organ looked strange.

Campaigner Anna Nurjanah was stunned to find eight items of plastic inside a mahi-mahi fish that she bought from a market in West Java, Indonesia (items pictured right)

Inside, the pair were horrified to find eight items of plastic – including an intact spoon and the wrapper from a candy bar.

Also found inside the fish was a deodoriser cap, a long plastic strap, and various other smaller pieces of plastic.

Anna, a housewife an environmental campaigner, posted the video to her Instagram account Volunteersindo back in June, where it went viral. 

Speaking to local site Detik about the moment the plastic was discovered, she said: ‘My household assistant called me, “ma’am”, he said “there is something in the belly of the fish”. 

Anna said her assistant was preparing the fish for a meal when he called her over because he spotted something inside the stomach, before making the grim discovery

Anna said her assistant was preparing the fish for a meal when he called her over because he spotted something inside the stomach, before making the grim discovery

‘When I checked, it turned out there was a candy wrapper, when I looked again there was a plastic spoon and other things.’

Mahi-mahi are a common fish found in waters around the equator. They are surface-dwelling predators that feed on algae floating on the water’s surface, as well as other small fish. 

Because they are largely indiscriminate feeders, mahi-mahi are particularly susceptible to ingesting plastic after mistaking it for food.

Fish struggle to break down plastic in their stomachs, which causes them to become full, meaning the fish starve to death. The blockages can also cause fatal infections.

Among the items inside the fish were an entire plastic spoon, a candy wrapper (pictured), a long metal strap and the tip of a deodoriser can

Among the items inside the fish were an entire plastic spoon, a candy wrapper (pictured), a long metal strap and the tip of a deodoriser can

A 2017 study by The Ocean Cleanup Foundation estimated that between 1.15million and 2.41million tonnes of plastic waste enters the oceans every year, 67 per cent of which is washed there from rivers in Asia.

Plastic is particularly dangerous because it takes hundreds of years to degrade, and does so by breaking into smaller and smaller pieces.

These pieces accumulate over time, and are consumed by wildlife. 



Read more at DailyMail.co.uk