Could an Australian bee solve the world's plastic crisis?

Authored by telegraph.co.uk and submitted by ManiaforBeatles
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Researchers believe an Australian bee which produces a “cellophane-like” material for its nests could help to end the world’s reliance on disposable plastics.

The native Hylaeus nubilosus masked bee, known for the distinctive yellow badge on its back, does not sting or live in hives but it has generated interest because of the nesting material it produces, which is non-toxic, waterproof, flame-resistant and able to withstand heat.

A biotech company in New Zealand, Humble Bee, is trying to reverse-engineer the material in the hope of mass producing it as an alternative to plastic.

Veronica Harwood-Stevenson, the firm’s founder, said she began investigating the potential plastic alternative after noticing a throwaway line in a research paper about the “cellophane-like” qualities of the masked bee’s nesting material.

"Plastic particles and chemicals have permeated ecosystems and organisms around the world, [from] foetal blood of babies [to] the most remote arctic lakes; it's so pervasive, it's terrifying," she told The Sydney Morning Herald.

"It's about biomimicry, about copying what's in the natural environment, and we've been doing it in design for centuries, from plane wing design inspired by birds of prey to train shapes reflecting bird beaks."

Richard Furneaux, a chemistry professor at the Victoria University of Wellington, said the discovery of the new material was “almost too good to be true”.

fifibuci on August 19th, 2018 at 06:43 UTC »

An interesting note: Cellophane itself if actually a different structure of glucose (chemically identical) and is 100% biodegradable, though its manufacture wasn't so green. It also isn't used in as many applications as it used to be, being replaced by some plastics (which are not).

So, the comparison here is a bit moot.

Jennifungus on August 19th, 2018 at 06:11 UTC »

There is a cornstarch derived plastic alternative that already exists but it isn't as durable as this sounds like it would be. Still, I wish it were being used more for packaging and fast food containers.

FindingQuadrilateral on August 19th, 2018 at 05:25 UTC »

It is amazing that we still have a lot to learn from nature.