Recently Discovered Plastic Eating Fungi May Bring a Future Resolve to Plastic Pollution Problem
Plasticpollution is one of the most pressing environmental issues as an estimated 8 million tons of plastic waste enter the oceans every year. Plastic waste, especially non-biodegradable materials like polyethylene (PE) and polyurethane (PU), poses a severe environmental threat, by polluting oceans, harming wildlife, and clogging landfills. Despite efforts to reduce plastic consumption and increase recycling, plastic waste continues to rise globally.
Source: https://englishpluspodcast.com/plastic-eating-fungi-natures-solution-to-our-pollution-problem/
While
conventional plastics take centuries to break down, the recent discovery by
scientists at Lake Stechlin, Germany in plastic-eating fungi may offer a
groundbreaking solution. The research claims that these fungi grow
exclusively on particular synthetic polymers and can also form biomass.
Depending majorly upon external conditions, such as temperature,
micronutrients, etc these hungry plastic-eating fungi are a solution to efficiently
address the drastically increasing plastic pollution.
The recent development is an add-on to the 2011 pivotal
discovery that occurred when a group of students from Yale University
identified Pestalotiopsis microspore in the Amazon rainforest. It was a
fungus that can digest polyurethane under anaerobic (oxygen-free) conditions.
Since then, it paved the way for further research into fungi species capable of
degrading various plastic types.
These fungi digest plastic through enzymes that break
down long polymer chains into simpler compounds, which the fungi can then use
as an energy source. These enzymes are of particular interest to researchers
because they could potentially be harnessed or synthesized on an industrial
scale to manage plastic waste more efficiently. Beyond fungi, researchers
are also exploring plastic-eating bacteria, such as Ideonella sakaiensis,
discovered in Japan in 2016, which can degrade PET plastics.
However, fungi may hold a key advantage with the
ability to thrive in diverse environments and break down multiple types of
plastic. These discoveries are promising but need to overcome hurdles
before being applied on a global scale. Further research is needed to enhance
the efficiency and address ethical concerns regarding their potential impacts
on ecosystems. The discovery of plastic-eating fungi represents a silver lining
in the fight against plastic pollution. If successfully utilized, these fungi have
the potential to transform the global waste management outlook to create a much
cleaner sustainable future.

Comments
Post a Comment