Ubiquity of polystyrene digestion and biodegradation within yellow mealworms, larvae of Tenebrio molitor Linnaeus (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae).

Chemosphere

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Department of Chemistry, William & Cloy Codiga Resource Recovery Center, Center for Sustainable Development & Global Competitiveness, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. Electronic address:

Published: December 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers from 22 countries found that yellow mealworms can survive and break down polystyrene foam (PS), showing promise for plastic waste management.
  • The study indicated that when fed PS foam, mealworms exhibited a decrease in PS mass and significant chemical changes in the material, suggesting they can metabolize it effectively.
  • Introducing gentamycin hampered the mealworms' ability to degrade PS, highlighting the importance of their gut microbiome in this biodegradation process.

Article Abstract

Academics researchers and "citizen scientists" from 22 countries confirmed that yellow mealworms, the larvae of Tenebrio molitor Linnaeus, can survive by eating polystyrene (PS) foam. More detailed assessments of this capability for mealworms were carried out by12 sources: five from the USA, six from China, and one from Northern Ireland. All of these mealworms digested PS foam. PS mass decreased and depolymerization was observed, with appearance of lower molecular weight residuals and functional groups indicative of oxidative transformations in extracts from the frass (insect excrement). An addition of gentamycin (30 mg g), a bactericidal antibiotic, inhibited depolymerization, implicating the gut microbiome in the biodegradation process. Microbial community analyses demonstrated significant taxonomic shifts for mealworms fed diets of PS plus bran and PS alone. The results indicate that mealworms from diverse locations eat and metabolize PS and support the hypothesis that this capacity is independent of the geographic origin of the mealworms, and is likely ubiquitous to members of this species.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.08.078DOI Listing

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