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Battle for a park 24.03.2011, 22:34 1 comment

Green battles: Muscovites demand their park back

A group of Moscow residents have almost won a 10-year fight over the use of a local park.

Forest dump 15.03.2011, 18:14

Go green or get pink-slipped: eco-unfriendly governors risk losing jobs

Flora and fauna may no longer be the only things endangered by the lack of a green strategy in some Russian regions.

"Milking" of a sturgeon 28.02.2011, 11:38 3 comments

All in a roe - black caviar could become cheaper

It is a luxurious delicacy for the most exquisite tastes. And yet black caviar could soon become more affordable after Russian scientists discovered a technique to harvest the eggs without killing the sturgeon.

Bug munches plastic trash, possibly cleaning oceans

Published: 29 March, 2011, 13:31

Image from state-of-affairs.org

Image from state-of-affairs.org

TAGS: Ecology, SciTech, Biology


Nature may have found a way to dispose of the huge amounts of plastic garbage, which has been increasingly accumulating in the oceans. A small bacteria feeding on it has been discovered. This may be a boon or a bane for the aquatic environment.

The bacteria was discovered through electron microscopy on plastic items sampled at the Sargasso Sea, an area in the North Atlantic, where debris tends to stack up due to local currents.

The primitive organisms live in pits in the plastic and appear to feed on it as well, says marine microbiologist Tracy Mincer of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts.

"They look like you took a hot barbecue briquette and threw it into snow," Nature News cites Mincer as saying. "You see this melting bit all around the outside of the cells, and they're just burrowing into the plastic."

The specialized bug is not encountered in other environment, like surrounding seawater or seaweed.

Scientists are not yet sure whether these organisms will eventually do more good than harm in dealing with pollution. If their digestion products are environmentally-friendly, then it would mean that nature has found a new way to limit the damage humanity does.

But plastic contains numerous toxins, and the bacteria may be introducing those into the food chain by feeding on it and then becoming food for larger organism.

+23 (29 votes)
 
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04.03.2011, 13:23 3 comments

New cosmic ray data casts doubt on common theory

Scientists studying data gathered by the cosmic ray detector PAMELA say the accepted theory on their origin may need to be corrected or completely eliminated.

A group of NASA scientists have discovered a new mineral of space origin in a meteorite found in Antarctica in 1969 (Image by Leonard Wikberg III / sciencedata.net) 06.04.2011, 19:40 12 comments

Four-billion-year-old surprise from space

A group of NASA scientists have discovered a new mineral of space origin in one of the most historically significant celestial objects – a meteorite found in Antarctica in 1969.

Jennifer B (unregistered) May 17, 2012, 11:44
0

GarryB wrote in #3

I agree with all you said except, "The only problem is that if the Americans research it, it will be for the purposes of making it a weapon."

We don't make EVERYTHING we research into weapons.

but we do need to come up with a plan because this i don't think is the best option for the ecosystem.

Giant Robo March 07, 2012, 01:21
+11

Just wait until these bugs make their way into the PVC piping of cities. Everything will begin to crumble away.

Nature always wins, we are not its master :)

The Perspectivist March 06, 2012, 07:49
+4

Things like this always pop up, but they always seem to fade away. Much like solar power, it won't be heavily invested in, and the public won't hear anything of it.