Microscopic diatoms with taste for marine refuse could help clean up sea
Microscopic creatures could be helping reduce marine garbage on the ocean surface, not only by "eating" plastics but by causing tiny pieces to sink to the sea floor.
Microscopic creatures could be helping reduce marine garbage on the ocean surface, not only by "eating" plastics but by causing tiny pieces to sink to the sea floor.
The plastic-dwellers appear to be biodegrading the millions of tonnes of debris floating on waters worldwide, according to oceanographers at the University of Western Australia.
They analysed more than 1,000 images of material drifting along Australia's coast in a study published in the scientific journal .
The study is the first to document the biological communities living on the tiny particles of debris known as microplastics, and recorded many new types of microbe and invertebrate.
"Plastic biodegradation seems to happen at sea," oceanographer JuliaReisser said.
"I am excited about this because the 'plastic-eating' microbes could provide solutions for better waste disposal practices on land."
Scientists have warned that microplastics - particles smaller than 5mm - are threatening to alter the open ocean's natural environment.