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Serbian Scientists Experiment With Mealworms To Degrade Polystyrene
Thursday August 21, 2025. 05:30 AM , from Slashdot
![]() They habitually eat more or less anything, but need the training to eat the plastic products. 'We have larvae that have been adapted over a long time to biodegrade plastic, to be as efficient as possible in the process,' Ilijin told Reuters. She said the bacteria living in their guts break down the plastic into carbon dioxide and water, and showed no evidence of leaving microplastic residue in their innards or faeces. The work builds on similar research projects in the U.S. and Africa. The institute has given Belgrade-based Belinda Animals several containers of the mealworms. It is now breeding them and hoping to attract a network of similar farms. 'When breaking down 1 kg of Styrofoam, larvae emit one to two grams of carbon dioxide... If we incinerate it... (Styrofoam) emits over 4,000 times more,' owner Boris Vasiljev said. He also envisages the larvae being used as animal feed, should it reach a large commercial scale. The use of mealworms is still in its infancy, Ilijin said, as Serbia still needs to adopt regulations that would allow the use and sale of insect products for animal fodder. 'Styrofoam takes over 500 years to decompose in nature... this would be one of the good ways for solving the problem of plastic waste in nature,' Ilijin said. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/08/20/2245213/serbian-scientists-experiment-with-mealworms-to-...
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