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View Full Version : Amazonian Mushroom Eats Indestructible Plastics



Princess Luna
2nd February 2012, 01:50
We use polyurethane to make just about everything—garden hoses, furniture, the entirety of my local 99-cent store. It's easy to produce, durable, and dirt cheap. What it isn't is recyclable—there isn't a single natural process that breaks it down. That is until a newly-discovered Amazonian fungus takes a bite.

Pestalotiopsis microspora (not shown) is a resident of the Ecuadorian rainforest and was discovered by a group of student researchers led by molecular biochemistry professor Scott Strobel as part of Yale's annual Rainforest Expedition and Laboratory. It's the first fungus species to be able to survive exclusively on polyurethane and, more importantly, able to do so in anaerobic conditions—the same conditions found in the bottom of landfills. This makes the fungus a prime candidate for bioremediation projects that could finally provide an alternative to just burying the plastic and hoping for the best.
http://gizmodo.com/5880768/amazonian-mushroom-eats-indestructible-plastics

PC LOAD LETTER
2nd February 2012, 23:43
As nervous as introducing (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kudzu#Invasive_species) species (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbits_in_Australia) into new (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coypu) environments (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_boar#Present_range) makes me, this could definitely solve some of our waste disposal problems ...

ColonelCossack
2nd February 2012, 23:50
I can just imagine a day of the trifids type scenario happening... well not really. This is quite interesting news. But what about rubbish not made of polyurethane?

Rooster
3rd February 2012, 00:02
Are they edible?

PC LOAD LETTER
3rd February 2012, 00:02
I can just imagine a day of the trifids type scenario happening... well not really. This is quite interesting news. But what about rubbish not made of polyurethane?
Eject it into space?

Or recycle it.

Without capitalism, more resources could be allocated to advancing recycling technology and/or developing new materials that break down naturally ... As of right now, the world is an oil junkie, fiending for oil products (like most plastics) ... there's no profit in creating an alternative at the moment (sadly).


Are they edible?

Genus Pestalotiopsis generally causes plant-based disease, so not likely ... although it would be nice if the full paper (http://aem.asm.org/content/77/17/6076) wasn't behind a pay wall in case potential toxicity was mentioned ...

ckaihatsu
3rd February 2012, 01:17
Any plant breeders here? -- Someone should cross-breed these with the *other* kind so that we could then turn our spare equipment into a trippy experience...!


=S^ D