Posts tagged bioremediation

Plastic-eating worms may offer solution to mounting waste

environment, digestion, bioremediation, plastics, mealworm, waste, plastiphage

Enter the mighty mealworm. The tiny worm, which is the larvae form of the darkling beetle, can subsist on a diet of Styrofoam and other forms of polystyrene, according to two companion studies co-authored by Wei-Min Wu, a senior research engineer in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford. Microorganisms in the worms’ guts biodegrade the plastic in the process – a surprising and hopeful finding.

http://news.stanford.edu/pr/2015/pr-worms-digest-plastics–092915.html

Evidence of Polyethylene Biodegradation by Bacterial Strains from the Guts of Plastic-Eating Waxworms

plastic, worms, biodegradable, PE, metabolism, waxworms, bioremediation

Polyethylene (PE) has been considered nonbiodegradable for decades. Although the biodegradation of PE by bacterial cultures has been occasionally described, valid evidence of PE biodegradation has remained limited in the literature. We found that waxworms, or Indian mealmoths (the larvae of Plodia interpunctella), were capable of chewing and eating PE films.

http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es504038a