Plastic pollution may have met its match: The saliva of wax worms

$ 30.99 · 4.9 (72) · In stock

Nature's Solution to Plastic Pollution: The Amazing Power of the Wax Worm - The New York Times

Breaking News English, 2-Page Mini-Lesson

Wax worm saliva and the enzymes therein are the key to polyethylene degradation by Galleria mellonella

ChunxOfEarth (@ChunxOfEarth) / X

Scientists Raise Alarm About Threats to the Human Microbiome in New Documentary 'The Invisible Extinction'. Dr. Martin Blaser and Dr. Gloria Dominguez-Bello talked to PEOPLE about their quest to save the human

Tina Comden (@tcomden) / X

StrangeScience - Mt Lions are eating Wild Donkeys, Scientist say its OK

Researchers propose new structures to harvest untapped source of freshwater. It's capable of capturing water vapor from above the ocean and condensing it into fresh water and do so in a manner

Poppy Cynthia Louw (PCLouw@) / X

Architecture, construction, retention, and repair of faecal shields in three tribes of tortoise beetles (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae, Cassidinae: Cassidini, Mesomphaliini, Spilophorini)

SheXy ShellyMarie (@_SheXy_) / X

Matthew A. Stough, Ph.D on LinkedIn: Plastic pollution may have met its match: The saliva of wax worms

As Euthanasia becomes more prevalent. A Swiss company has designed a commercial grade suicide pod to meet market demands. : r/ofcoursethatsathing

Flying toward a plastic-free world: Can Drosophila serve as a model organism to develop new strategies of plastic waste management? - ScienceDirect