Scientists discover lesser mealworm's potential to combat plastic waste
UNB
Publish: 29 Oct 2024, 12:35 PM
NAIROBI,
Oct. 28 (Xinhua) -- Scientists affiliated with the Nairobi-based International
Center of Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE) on Monday announced the
discovery of a promising solution to the plastic waste menace in the lesser
mealworm.
Scientists at the ICIPE
have discovered that the larvae of a species of darkling beetle known
scientifically as Alphitobius are capable of consuming plastics, which have
contributed to global pollution.
Fathiya Khamis, ICIPE
senior scientist and lead researcher of the study, said the researchers have
also identified a consortium of important bacteria in the gut of the mealworm,
which helps in the digestion of plastic.
"Although often
mistaken for ordinary worms, mealworms are the larvae of the darkling beetles.
Worldwide, yellow mealworms, the larvae of a darkling beetle species called
Tenebrio molitor, have been used to biodegrade plastic," Khamis said in a
statement released in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital.
According to Khamis,
this is the first time that the African native smaller mealworms' ability to
decompose plastics has been recorded.
She stated that while
Africa generates only 5 percent and uses 4 percent of global plastic, there is
an increase in the usage of single-use plastic, making the continent the second
most polluted.
Khamis said scientists
tested the ability of the lesser mealworm to consume polystyrene, one of the
major microplastics that is fast accumulating both in land and water bodies.
Abdou Tenkouano, ICIPE
director-general, said the research boosts a growing body of innovations for a
circular economy. "We can exploit this knowledge to solve the plastic
waste pollution while also harnessing the benefits of mealworms, which are part
of the population of highly nutritious edible insects," Tenkouano said.
He said that the ICIPE
study also increases knowledge on bioremediation, the use of microbes to clean
up contaminated ecosystems, soil and groundwater applications.
Evalyne Ndotono, a
co-researcher, said that researchers are conducting additional studies to
understand the process through which mealworms consume polystyrene and whether
they gain any nutritional benefits from the material. She noted that
polystyrene waste comes from the commercial application of its most common
form, Styrofoam, a material that is used in food storage containers, packaging
of equipment, disposable plates and cups, and insulation in construction.
END/UNB/Xinhua/PR