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Biodegradation of Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) in Tenebrio molitor (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) larvae

Environment International 2020 272 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Wei‐Min Wu Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Wei‐Min Wu Yalei Zhang, Craig S. Criddle, Bo-Yu Peng, Wei‐Min Wu Zhibin Chen, Zhibin Chen, Wei‐Min Wu Craig S. Criddle, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Jiabin Chen, Jiabin Chen, Yalei Zhang, Bo-Yu Peng, Xuefei Zhou, Bo-Yu Peng, Bo-Yu Peng, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Jiabin Chen, Huarong Yu, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Jiabin Chen, Yalei Zhang, Jiabin Chen, Wei‐Min Wu Jiabin Chen, Jiabin Chen, Bo-Yu Peng, Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Xuefei Zhou, Craig S. Criddle, Yalei Zhang, Yalei Zhang, Jiabin Chen, Wei‐Min Wu Yalei Zhang, Jiabin Chen, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Jiabin Chen, Craig S. Criddle, Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Yalei Zhang, Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Wei‐Min Wu Yalei Zhang, Craig S. Criddle, Jiabin Chen, Yalei Zhang, Wei‐Min Wu Jiabin Chen, Yalei Zhang, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Craig S. Criddle, Jiabin Chen, Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Wei‐Min Wu Xuefei Zhou, Xuefei Zhou, Jiabin Chen, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Yalei Zhang, Yalei Zhang, Yalei Zhang, Yalei Zhang, Yalei Zhang, Xuefei Zhou, Wei‐Min Wu Yalei Zhang, Yalei Zhang, Yalei Zhang, Yalei Zhang, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Yalei Zhang, Wei‐Min Wu Yalei Zhang, Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu Wei‐Min Wu

Summary

Tenebrio molitor mealworm larvae were tested for their ability to biodegrade rigid polyvinyl chloride (PVC) microplastic powder. The larvae depolymerized and partially biodegraded PVC, extending earlier findings that mealworms can degrade polystyrene and polyethylene to a third major plastic polymer type.

Tenebrio molitor larvae (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) are capable of depolymerizing and biodegrading polystyrene and polyethylene. We tested for biodegradation of Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) in T. molitor larvae using rigid PVC microplastic powders (MPs) (70-150 μm) with weight-, number-, and size-average molecular weights (M<sub>w</sub>, M<sub>n</sub> and M<sub>z</sub>) of 143,800, 82,200 and 244,900 Da, respectively, as sole diet at 25 °C. The ingestion rate was 36.62 ± 6.79 mg MPs 100 larvae<sup>-1</sup> d<sup>-1</sup> during a 16-day period. The egested frass contained about 34.6% of residual PVC polymer, and chlorinated organic carbons. Gel permeation chromatography (GPC) analysis indicated a decrease in the M<sub>w</sub>, M<sub>n</sub> and M<sub>z</sub> by 33.4%, 32.8%, and 36.4%, respectively, demonstrating broad depolymerization. Biodegradation and oxidation of the PVC MPs was supported by the formation of OC and OC functional groups using frontier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and <sup>1</sup>H nuclear magnetic resonance (<sup>1</sup>H NMR), and by significant changes in the thermal characteristics using thermo-gravimetric analysis (TGA). Chloride released was counted as about 2.9% of the PVC ingested, indicating limited mineralization of the PVC MPs. T. molitor larvae survived with PVC as sole diet at up to 80% over 5 weeks but did not complete their life cycle with a low survival rate of 39% in three months. With PVC plus co-diet wheat bran (1:5, w/w), they completed growth and pupation as same as bran only in 91 days. Suppression of gut microbes with the antibiotic gentamicin severely inhibited PVC depolymerization, indicating that the PVC depolymerization/biodegradation was gut microbe-dependent. Significant population shifts and clustering in the gut microbiome and unique OTUs were observed after PVC MPs consumption. The results indicated that T. molitor larvae are capable of performing broad depolymerization/biodegradation but limited mineralization of PVC MPs.

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