A new species of darkling beetle larvae that degrade plastic

Monday, July 20, 2020 - 10:11 in Earth & Climate

An enormous plastic garbage island exists in the North Pacific that is seven times the size of the Korean Peninsula. The island, called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, is the result of 13 million tons of plastic that flow into the ocean annually from the 20,000 units of plastic consumed per second around the world. Plastic takes decades to hundreds of years to decompose naturally, with plastic bags taking 10 to 20 years, nylon products or disposable straws 30 to 40 years, and plastic water bottles—commonly used once then thrown away—500 years to decompose. This problem of plastic, which has been labeled a human disaster, has been recently proven to be decomposable by beetles common in Korea.

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