Jump directly to the content
The seals were seen in the Galapagos Islands, off the coast of Ecuador
Plight of the pups

Baby sea lions photographed playing with plastic rubbish that washed up on a beach on Galapagos Islands

Tui De Roy, the photographer who snapped the pups, says they were enjoying their new toy but she eventually took it away from them, fearing they might get tangled up in the sheet

A GROUP of inquisitive sea lion pups play a dangerous game with a piece of plastic rubbish washed in from the sea.

They tugged on the 5ft square sheet before poking it with their heads and wrapping it round them.

 The sea lions were seen in the Galapagos Islands, off the coast of Ecuador
4
The sea lions were seen in the Galapagos Islands, off the coast of EcuadorCredit: Solent News

Photographer Tui De Roy captured the disturbing scene in a tide pool on the Galapagos Islands, Ecuadaor. She eventually took it off them, saying: “They really tried to hang onto it.”

Explaining her decision, De Roy said: "It was wonderful to see how the pups enjoyed their new toy to play with, they were so excited it was hilarious.

"But at the same time I was very worried that this toy could easily harm them.

"They might swallow small pieces inadvertently, or get tangled in it and drown.

 The pups were, by De Roy's estimate, having a fantastic time
4
The pups were, by De Roy's estimate, having a fantastic timeCredit: Solent News
 The photographer says they were fighting over the plastic and were sad when she took it away
4
The photographer says they were fighting over the plastic and were sad when she took it awayCredit: Solent News
 Some 100mn marine animals die a year because of plastic debris floating in oceans
4
Some 100mn marine animals die a year because of plastic debris floating in oceansCredit: Solent News

"But they looked so disappointed when I took it away."

According to statistics from the Sea Turtle Conservancy, a marine conservation organisation, over 100 million marine animals are killed each year as a result of plastic debris in our oceans.

Animals mistake the indigestible plastic for food, or become tangled in it and suffocate or drown.

De Roy, 64, from Isla Santa Cruz, Ecuador, found the sea lions while she was accompanying a group of researchers studying marine productivity.

She believes the plastic, which she described as "heavy-duty", "clear" and "5ft square", might have been inadvertently dumped into the ocean by a vessel: "Maybe it had originally served to cover a ship's deck cargo."

Cheeky seal hitches ride on Alistair Forrest's kayak in the Forth Estuary, Scotland