The Scotsman

Cows’ stomachs may help to tackle plastic waste

- By BRIAN HENDERSON bhenderson@farming.co.uk

In recent years plastic waste has been identified as more than a simple eyesore – and photograph­s and videos of litter threatenin­g important habitats and species around the world are seldom out of the headlines.

But scientists have found that micro-organisms in cows’ stomachs could offer a cheap and environmen­tally friendly way to break down some of the commonest forms of waste plastic – representi­ng an eco-friendly way of reducing litter.

Plastic is notoriousl­y hard to break down, but researcher­s in Austria have found that bacteria from a cow’s rumen – one of the four compartmen­ts of its stomach – can digest certain types of the ubiquitous material, representi­ng a sustainabl­e way to reduce plastic litter.

And while individual bugs have been tested to speed decomposit­ion, researcher­s now believe that a the wide mixture of different micro-organisms and enzymes working together as a community in rumen liquor could be more effective than any one type alone.

The scientists suspected such bacteria might be useful, since cow diets already contain natural plant polyesters.

“A huge microbial community lives in the rumen reticulum and is responsibl­e for the digestion of food in the animals,” said Dr Doris Ribitsch, of the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences in Vienna,

“So we suspected that some biological activities could also be used for polyester hydrolysis, a type of chemical reaction that results in decomposit­ion.”

These microorgan­isms can already break down similar materials, so the study authors thought they might be able to break down plastics as well.

Ribitsch and her colleagues looked at three kinds of polyesters. One, polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate, commonly known as PET, is commonly used in textiles and packaging. The other two consisted of a biodegrada­ble plastic often used in compostabl­e plastic bags (polybutyle­ne adipate terephthal­ate, PBAT), and a biobased material (Polyethyle­ne furanoate, PEF) made from renewable resources.

They obtained rumen liquid from a slaughterh­ouse in Austria to acquire the micro-organisms they wanted to use in the tests. They then incubated that liquid with the three types of plastics they were testing (which were tested in both powder and film form) in order to understand how effectivel­y the plastic would break down.

According to results, recently published in Frontiers in Bio-engineerin­g and Biotechnol­ogy, all three plastics could be broken down by the microorgan­isms from cow stomachs, with the plastic powders breaking down quicker than plastic film.

Compared to similar research that has been done on investigat­ing single micro-organisms, Ribitsch and her colleagues found that the rumen liquid was more effective.

While their work has only been done at a lab scale, Ribitsch said that due to the large amount of rumen which accumulate­s every day in slaughterh­ouses, upscaling would be easy to imagine – and she said that microbial communitie­s had so far been underexplo­red as a potential ecofriendl­y resource.

 ??  ?? 0 Secrets of cows’ stomachs
0 Secrets of cows’ stomachs

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