Funghi discovered in the Amazon rainforest which degrades polyurethane

Soldato
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Polyurethane seemed like it couldn’t interact with the earth’s normal processes of breaking down and recycling material. That’s just because it hadn’t met the right mushroom yet.

The Amazon is home to more species than almost anywhere else on earth. One of them, carried home recently by a group from Yale University, appears to be quite happy eating plastic in airless landfills.

The group of students, part of Yale’s annual Rainforest Expedition and Laboratory with molecular biochemistry professor Scott Strobel, ventured to the jungles of Ecuador. The mission was to allow "students to experience the scientific inquiry process in a comprehensive and creative way." The group searched for plants, and then cultured the microorganisms within the plant tissue. As it turns out, they brought back a fungus new to science with a voracious appetite for a global waste problem: polyurethane.

The common plastic is used for everything from garden hoses to shoes and truck seats. Once it gets into the trash stream, it persists for generations. Anyone alive today is assured that their old garden hoses and other polyurethane trash will still be here to greet his or her great, great grandchildren. Unless something eats it.

The fungi, Pestalotiopsis microspora, is the first anyone has found to survive on a steady diet of polyurethane alone and--even more surprising--do this in an anaerobic (oxygen-free) environment that is close to the condition at the bottom of a landfill.

Student Pria Anand recorded the microbe’s remarkable behavior and Jonathan Russell isolated the enzymes that allow the organism to degrade plastic as its food source. The Yale team published their findings in the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology late last year concluding the microbe is "a promising source of biodiversity from which to screen for metabolic properties useful for bioremediation." In the future, our trash compactors may simply be giant fields of voracious fungi.

http://realizedworth.visibli.com/share/ksJfh6

There's obviously no mention of rates of degredation or anything along those lines, but is it possible this could be the answer to the endless cycle of digging a landfill, filling it up then digging another landfill etc.

If they can back up this claim scientifically I can see this being a huge new development.

BTW, I was so tempted to call this thread 'Magic mushrooms found in the Amazon' but thought that'd end up being completely derailed.
 
That sounds quite cool. But I can just see in 100 years time everyone having problems with their brand new hose pipes rotting as plastic eating mushrooms spread across the world.
 
I still dont see whats wrong with digging a giant hole down to lava and dumping all our rubbish in it :p Plus the geothermal energy benefits!
(I jest)
 
My bin is full of old polyurethane. how do I know it's full? Because there's not mushroom inside.

I'll get my coat
 
I still say that in the rainforest where will be the cure for cancer but we haven't found it yet.
 
Endless landfills. Do you have a source as to when the last landfill was covered over and a new one created, out of interest?
 
I take it there is no way of recycling polyurethane? Seems such a waste to be throwing plastics etc into landfills or feeding it to fungi when we are going to run out at some point.
 
Nice. But I can't see it being widely used... too much 'effort' for disposal companies these days.

Well, there could be ways to incentivise it. If nothing else, you could feed the plastic to the fungus, harvest the biomass, compost it and sell that off.


I still say that in the rainforest where will be the cure for cancer but we haven't found it yet.

Assuming we don't cut it all down first.


It'd be interesting to find out what these enzymes orginally evolved for. I wonder which compounds in the rainforest have a polyurethane-like structure. It'd be nice to have a cyclical system of producing an oil-independent bioplastic, using it, and then degrading it with the fungus.
 
One of the reasons the continual destruction of rainforest for farming is a bad idea. There's probably all sorts of plants in their that could cure cancer or a myriad of other uses and it could be all lost to grow palm oil FFS.
 
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