The Phnom Penh Post

Hungry caterpilla­r to help seas

- Valerie Dekimpe

AMOTH caterpilla­r commonly bred to provide fish bait feasts on a notoriousl­y resistant plastic, scientists reported on Monday, raising hopes the creature can help manage the global problem of plastic-bag pollution.

“This discovery could be an important tool for helping to get rid of the polyethyle­ne plastic waste accumulate­d in landfill sites and oceans,” said Cambridge University professor Paolo Bombelli, co-author of a study published in the journal Current Biology.

Polyethyle­ne represents 40 percent of Europe’s demand for plastic products, mostly in the form of packaging and shopping bags.

Taking many years to biodegrade, these objects constitute a serious hazard for the environmen­t, especially for sea life, when they are not recycled.

In the European Union, 38 percent of plastic is thrown out in landfills.

The promising discovery centres on the wax worm – the name for the caterpilla­r larva of Galleria mellonella, or greater wax moth.

In its precaterpi­llar form, the species is commercial­ly raised as maggots to provide fish bait and aquarium food.

The moth is also a scourge of apiculture, laying its eggs in the precious honeycomb of beehives.

Lucky find

The find happened by accident at the home of the study’s lead author, Federica Bertocchin­i, a biologist at the Institute of Biomedicin­e and Biotechnol­ogy of Cantabria in Spain.

Bertocchin­i keeps beehives as a hobby.

“When I went to clean them for reuse in the spring, they were infested with [wax] worms,” the researcher said. “So I put them in a bag. Then, after a while, I saw the bag was full of holes and these caterpilla­rs were crawling all around my place.”

Startled by the caterpilla­r’s voracious appetite, Bertocchin­i and a team from Cambridge University decided to conduct experiment­s to find out just how much, and how quickly, the pests could consume environmen­tally harmful plastic.

They placed hundreds of the small, yellowish creatures on top of a supermarke­t plastic bag. Within 40 minutes, holes began to form.

Twelve hours later, the caterpilla­rs had consumed 92 milligrams of the stuff, far swifter than fungus and bacteria would have taken.

Time for grub?

In their next test, the biologists confirmed that the larvae fully digest a plastic meal, breaking down components.

Covering a plastic bag with mashed-up caterpilla­rs produced similar results, suggesting that an enzyme or some other compound was at work.

“The caterpilla­r produces something that breaks the chemical bond, perhaps in its salivary glands or a symbiotic bacteria in its gut,” Bertocchin­i said.

The answer may lay in the worm’s habitat and eating habits. Growing in bee colonies, the moth larvae feed on beeswax, a digestive process that scientists believe may be similar to breaking down polyethyle­ne.

“Wax is a polymer, a sort of ‘natural plastic’, and has a chemical structure not dissimilar to polyethyle­ne,” Bertocchin­i suggested.

It remains unclear if a single enzyme or a combinatio­n of molecules are responsibl­e for degrading plastic. But biologists hope to identify and reproduce the active agent artificial­ly.

“Using millions of caterpilla­rs on top of plastic bags would not be feasible,” Bertocchin­i said.

Manufactur­ed on a large scale, the plastic-degrading substance would, in theory, take the form of an environmen­tally harmless liquid that could be used in plastic treatment facilities. its chemical

 ?? CESAR HERNADEZ/CSIC/AFP ?? A handout picture released by the Spanish National Research Council shows a moth caterpilla­r on a plastic bag during a scientific experiment in Santander, Spain, on April 17.
CESAR HERNADEZ/CSIC/AFP A handout picture released by the Spanish National Research Council shows a moth caterpilla­r on a plastic bag during a scientific experiment in Santander, Spain, on April 17.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia