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chaogomu ,

The thing that never gets mentioned here is that most of the time, you have to starve the bacteria to eat plastic. It can eat plastic, but it often prefers easier to digest stuff.

Canyon201 ,
@Canyon201@lemmy.world avatar

Time to infect the great pacific garbage patch!!!

LuciferMorningWood ,

I think the UK is already a bad place the way it is, but sure

curiosityLynx ,

They said Pacific, so it's not the UK

housepanther ,
@housepanther@lemmy.goblackcat.com avatar

That’s really interesting but I am curious what waste products the bacteria excrete from the metabolic process of digestion. I hope the waste products from the bacteria are actually useful.

EDIT: Okay, so CO2 is produced by the bacteria. I also read more carefully and the study suggests that we produce more refuse plastic than the bacteria can consume.

Dark_Blade ,
@Dark_Blade@lemmy.world avatar

Monkey’s Paw lol

Zeth0s ,

I would guess they can digest some plastic. I don’t see them eating kevlar…

Lexam ,

They don’t need to eat kevlar when they can eat lead kid.

cen.acs.org/…/BeefedBacteria-Lead-Water.html

bernieecclestoned OP , (edited )

the study suggests that we produce more refuse plastic than the bacteria can consume.

That sounds like a ratio problem

Goudriaan already did some pilot experiments with real sea water and some sediment that she had collected from the Wadden Sea floor. “The first results of these experiments hints at plastic being degraded, even in nature,” she says. “A new PhD student will have to continue that work. Ultimately, of course, you hope to calculate how much plastic in the oceans really is degraded by bacteria. But much better than cleaning up, is prevention. And only we humans can do that,” Goudriaan says.

So less plastic and more plastic eating bacteria, maybe it could be genetically engineered to produced biofuel.

We need net zero plastic as well as co2. Any tech that can recycle plastic pollution and offset a fossil fuel emission should get turbo tax credits.

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