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Wax Worms Eat Plastic. But Can They Clean Up Our Trash Pollution?

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Wax worms are common insects that evolved to live in bee hives. Now we know they can eat plastic. Good Lubricant Polyethylene Wax

Wax Worms Eat Plastic. But Can They Clean Up Our Trash Pollution?

Scientists have discovered that wax worms can eat plastic bags. Could that help us reduce plastic pollution?

Each year, the world produces 300 million tons of plastic, much of which resists degradation and ends up polluting every corner of the globe. But a team of European scientists may have found a unique solution to the plastic problem. They discovered that a common insect can chew sizable holes in a plastic shopping bag within 40 minutes.

“This study is another milestone discovery for the research on biodegradation of plastics,” says Wei-Min Wu, an environmental engineer at Stanford University.

The discovery was led by Federica Bertocchini, a developmental biologist at the University of Cantabria in Spain. She first noticed the possibility as she cleaned out her backyard bee hives two years ago.

She removed some wax worms (Galleria mellonella) living in the

Wax Worms Eat Plastic. But Can They Clean Up Our Trash Pollution?

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