ArtZuron,
@ArtZuron@beehaw.org avatar

Fungi were the first things to eat trees, so I suppose its not surprising that they could maybe eat plastic.

Ropianos,

What is the application for plastic eating fungi? I thought that burning is the preferred alternative if all you want is to reduce it to CO2. That was you get some energy out of it too.

Or is it hoped that they will be able to survive in the oceans and/or landfills that contain too many toxic substances to burn directly?

fr0g,

Well burning releases a lot of highly toxic chemicals for starters

Ropianos,

Well, not for polyethylene if done at high enough temperatures. And I doubt that the fungi will like plastic covered in toxic substances. But maybe there is a price advantage there if you don’t need to ship the plastic to a incinerator.

I didn’t read up on it in detail but apparently incineration has some large disadvantages, only about 22% of all plastic waste is incinerated. So fungi could be useful for the remaining 78% so it might be more useful than I expected.

towerful,

I guess at this point, it’s inevitable.
But I really worry when these plastic eating bacteria/fungi/whatever become prevalent.
Because there is a lot of plastic everywhere. And some of it is better if it isn’t destroyed/consumed (like medical equipment, plumbing, etc)

pizzaiolo,

While good, it also means the CO2 sequestered in these plastic products will be released into the atmosphere 🥲

fr0g, (edited )

Actually fungi often tend to store a lot of CO2 below ground.

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