Wriggling critters armed with enzymes can break down plastics that would otherwise take decades, or even centuries to degrade.

At first glance there’s nothing particularly remarkable about waxworms. The larval form of wax moths, these pale wriggling grubs feed on the wax that bees use to make their honeycomb. For beekeepers, the pests are something to swiftly get rid of without a second thought.

But in 2017 molecular biologist Federica Bertocchini, who at the time was researching the embryonic development of vertebrates at the Spanish National Research Council, stumbled on a potentially game-changing discovery about these creatures.

Bertocchini, an amateur beekeeper, threw some of the waxworms in a plastic bag after cleaning her hive, and left them alone. A short time later, she noticed the worms had started producing small holes in the plastic, which begun degrading as soon as it touched the worms’ mouths.

  • @dlpkl
    link
    146 months ago

    just wait until they develop a taste for the microplastics in our brains

    • @Xatix
      link
      76 months ago

      Is anyone else’s tadpole squirming a lot more than usual?

    • FenrirIII
      link
      36 months ago

      I doubt there’s enough concentration in one place to be noticed. However, the enzymes could be used to possibly treat us and remove the microplastics