Microbes found that eat plastic at low temperatures
The Guardian Weekly|May 19, 2023
Microbes that can digest plastics at low temperatures have been discovered by scientists in the Alps and the Arctic, which could be a valuable tool in recycling
Helena Horton
Microbes found that eat plastic at low temperatures

Many micro organisms that can do this have already been found, but they can usually only work at temperatures above 30C. This means that using them in industrial practice is prohibitively expensive because of the heating required. It also means using them is not carbon neutral.

Scientists from the Swiss Federal Institute WSL have found microbes that can do this at 15C , which could lead to a breakthrough in microbial recycling. Their findings have been published in the journal Frontiers in Microbiology.

Dr Joel Rüthi from WSL and colleagues sampled 19 strains of bacteria and 15 of fungi growing on free-lying or intentionally buried plastic kept in the ground for one year in Greenland, Switzerland and Svalbard in Norway. They let the microbes grow as single-strain cultures in the laboratory in darkness at 15C and tested them to see if they could digest different types of plastic.

This story is from the May 19, 2023 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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This story is from the May 19, 2023 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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