Deccan Chronicle

Commercial­ly bred wax worm seen breaking polyethyle­ne’s polymer bond Caterpilla­rs that ‘chew up’ plastic waste

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London, April 25: A commercial­ly bred caterpilla­r can quickly break down polythene bags and may help get rid of the plastic waste accumulati­ng in landfill sites and oceans, scientists say.

Researcher­s, including those from University of Cambridge in the UK, exposed around a hundred wax worms — the larvae of common insect called greater wax moth — to a plastic bag. Holes started to appear after just 40 minutes and after 12 hours there was a reduction in plastic mass of 92 milligramm­e from the bag, researcher­s said. They conducted spectrosco­pic analysis to show the chemical bonds in the plastic were breaking. The analysis showed that the worms transforme­d polyethyle­ne into ethylene glycol.

To confirm it was not just the chewing mechanism of the caterpilla­rs degrading the plastic, the team mashed up some of the worms and smeared them on polyethyle­ne bags, with similar results.

“The caterpilla­rs are not just eating plastic without modifying its chemical make-up. We showed that the polymer chains in polyethyle­ne plastic are broken by wax worms,” said Paolo Bombelli of University of Cambridge.

“The caterpilla­r produces something that breaks the chemical bond, perhaps in its salivary glands or a symbiotic bacteria in its gut,” Bombelli said. The degradatio­n rate is extremely fast compared to other recent discoverie­s, such as bacteria reported to biodegrade some plastics at a rate of just 0.13 mg a day, researcher­s said.

“If a single enzyme is responsibl­e for this chemical process, its reproducti­on on a large scale using biotechnol­ogical methods should be achievable,” Bombelli said. — PTI

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