Monday, June 21, 2010

Clever thinking



We’ve all heard the plastic bag horror stories—the billions of bags discarded every year that wind up polluting oceans, killing wildlife and getting dumped in landfills where they take up to 1,000 years to decompose.
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Researchers have been wracking their brains for years to figure out a solution.
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But leave it to a Canadian high school student to leave them all in the dust.
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Daniel Burd, an 11th grader at Waterloo Collegiate Institute, has discovered a way to make plastic bags degrade in as little as three months—a finding that won him first prize at the Canada-Wide Science Fair, a $20,000 scholarship, and a chance to revolutionize a major environmental issue.
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Burd’s strategy was simple: Since plastic does eventually degrade, it must be eaten by microorganisms.
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If those microorganisms, as well as the optimal conditions for their growth, could be identified, we could put them to work eating the plastic much faster than under normal conditions.
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With this goal in mind, he ground plastic bags into a powder and concocted a solution of household chemicals, yeast and tap water to encourage microbe growth.
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Then he added the plastic powder and let the microbes work their magic for three months.
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Finally, he tested the resulting bacterial culture on plastic bags, exposing one plastic sample to dead bacteria as a control.
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Sure enough, the plastic exposed to the live bacteria was 17 percent lighter than the control after six weeks.
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Once Burd examined the most effective strains of bacteria, he was able to isolate two types—Sphingomonas and Pseudomonas—as the plastic munchers.
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At 37 degrees and optimal bacterial concentration, the microbes had consumed 43 percent of a plastic sample within six weeks.
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Discover
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Excellent thinking and actions by a young man
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And how many adult scientists have been spending how many millions over how many years to find a solution to this problem?

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

until that idea gets into processing, fish and other marinelife-organisms will be full of plastic ? ... and oil ... and toxic waist, ... I assume ?

tanx n greetz
diki