Plastik yiyen böcek
Doğanın mucizevi diye tabir edebilecğimiz sıradışı olaylarına şahit olmaya devam ediyoruz
Plastic Eating Bugs
Mother Nature helps with mankind’s disasters in many ways, from oil eating bacteria to effluent cleansing wetland plants to heavy metal absorbing plants. But the mountains of plastic mankind generates and tosses into land fills just seem to keep mounting without a solution. Until very recently, that is. It was recently discovered that the larva of a common moth, Galleria mellonella, eats plastic! This is not its normal diet, but the beeswax in hive honeycombs is apparently similar to plastic. Per the Zetas, not an accident, as this little moth is a transplant, a gift to mankind.
- Nature throws Humanity a Softball, provides Bugs that Digest Plastic
April 21, 2017
https://www.yahoo.com/tech/nature-throws-humanity-softball-provides-bugs-digest-plastic- Plastic is everywhere, and as far as the Earth is concerned it absolutely sucks. Scientists believe it can take anywhere from 400 to 1,000 years for common disposable plastic products like bags, bottles, and containers to break down after being thrown into a landfill — or flying out of your car window and into a ditch. That’s a long, long time, and it makes plastic a particularly bad pollutant. Now, researchers believe they’ve stumbled upon a natural plastic decomposition tool that has been crawling around right under our feet, in the form of Galleria mellonella, the greater wax moth. Scientists from Cambridge University just discovered that the moth’s larva can actually eat and break down plastic in a similar way to beeswax, which the moth regularly consumes. Once researchers know exactly how the moth is performing its trick they could apply that knowledge to large-scale efforts to biodegrade junk plastic in places where it causes the most problems, such as the ocean and other pollution hot spots.
- Galleria Mellonella
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galleria_mellonella- Galleria mellonella, the greater wax moth or honeycomb moth, is a moth of the family Pyralidae. It is the only member of the genus Galleria. It is found in most of the world, including Europe and adjacent Eurasia, its presumed native range, and as an introduced species on other continents, including North America and Australia. The caterpillar larvae, or waxworms, feed on the honeycomb inside bee nests and may become pests of apiculture. Less often, they are found in bumblebee and wasp nests, or feeding on dried figs. The larvae are commercially available.
ZetaTalk Surprise 4/29/2017: How does it happen that a moth is the only member of a genus, the genus Galleria, yet is found throughout the world. This is not an accident, and this shy moth has not evolved on Earth. It is genetically engineered to be able to exist and flourish on Earth, though evolved on other worlds. Like many of the plants such as Cannabis, which is beneficial to countless diseases that afflict mankind, this moth is a transplant. It was foreseen that products made from the oil deposited on the hapless Earth by the many passages of Nibiru would evolve into trash that was resistant to decay. Thus, the engineers slipped in a solution, in the form of a lowly moth!
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