Home Latest Potential breakthrough: These wax worms could fight plastic pollution

Potential breakthrough: These wax worms could fight plastic pollution

1 min read

Oct 7(ABC): Two substances in the saliva of wax worms — moth larvae that eat wax made by bees to build honeycombs — readily break down a common type of plastic, researchers said on Tuesday, in a potential advance in the global fight against plastic pollution.

The researchers said the two enzymes identified in the caterpillar saliva were found to rapidly and at room temperature degrade polyethylene, the world’s most widely used plastic and a major contributor to an environmental crisis extending from ocean trenches to mountaintops.

The study builds on the researchers’ 2017 findings that wax worms were capable of degrading polyethylene, though at that time it was unclear how these small insects did it. The answer was enzymes — substances produced by living organisms that trigger biochemical reactions.

  • Internews Pakistan is an Islamabad-based news agency established in 1997.

Load More Related Articles
Load More By Editor in Chief
Load More In Latest

Comments are closed.

Check Also

‘Pakistan, New Zealand unhappy with Olympic cricket qualification process’

Pakistan and New Zealand have expressed discontent with the International Cricket Council’…