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by mlyle
1638 days ago
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> That's not really accurate - if an organism can breakdown (digest) plastic to any extent, it can do so all the way to water and CO2. I can't breakdown most plastic to any significant extent. If I ate small pieces of plastic, some would be excreted in poop and some would accumulate in my body. If I ate animals that have eaten small pieces of plastic, being high up the foodchain, this may be exacerbated (biomagnification). If bacteria learn to degrade plastic--- that may improve the situation for my grandchildren but it probably doesn't reduce how much is accumulating in marine life now that much. |
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Actually you can't break down plastic at all. You can just grind it with your teeth.
> If bacteria learn to degrade plastic--- that may improve the situation for my grandchildren but it probably doesn't reduce how much is accumulating in marine life now that much.
This is where your mistake lies - if you can degrade plastic at all, then you can degrade it all the way to water and CO2. There is no partial degrading here, you either can, or you can't.
(Note: I am speaking of degrading plastic for its energy content, which is what bacteria would do. Mechanically breaking plastic into small pieces is not the same thing. Nor is de-polymerizing the plastic.)