this post was submitted on 31 Aug 2025
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Fungi: mycelia, mushrooms & more
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Mercedes already has known issues with their wiring harnesses intentionally degrading, to be biodegradable, and they won't even cover that shit under warranty.
And I think you're missing the point we're trying to make. The plastic eating fungi and bacteria might be intended to only be applied to areas we consider pollution, but those organisms don't give a shit what we do or don't consider pollution vs important stuff.
In a world slap full of plastic, such organisms are simply like FOOD, NOM NOM!
Life finds a way...
I hear your point, I don't know who "we" is. I believe you and the prior commenter are missing the point of the article entirely. This is about harnessing nature for our benefit to fight plastic pollution. An extreme problem contributing to climate change and threatening all of our lives. You are both arguing a straw man to try to undermine the article which it seems you have missed the point of entirely. The idea that fighting plastic pollution means fungi will invade your home and destroy the plastics in your devices is not logical. This is in no way a Jurassic Park type of scenario and that logic is a bit absurd. Plastic pollution has colonized the earth. Fighting it with something harmless like nature isn't comparable.
Fungi spread. It's part of their behavior. If a fungi is bred to specifically feed on a particular type of plastic, it will do that, outside of waste treatment facilities and outside of human control. This is not a "straw man", it is a directly relevant concern. The fungi will not know the difference between plastic pollution and plastic that is keeping infrastructure from falling apart.
How did you reach this conclusion? Nature is anything but harmless, it's a meat grinder.
Oh no, we totally get the desired benefits, I'm pretty sure everyone does.
But this is getting a bit past pure nature, they're bioengineering these organisms to be even more effective at eating plastics and stuff much faster and more rapidly.
The question becomes, what happens when/if such organisms get out of control, in a world full of a basically new food source to them?
What happens when someone deploys these organisms maliciously, in a plastic manufacturing center or a Walmart or something?
This is a false dichotomy.
Not trying this particular option is not the same thing as not trying at all.
An organism with plentiful nutrients and no natural predators in an environment will proliferate as an invasive species. This is, in fact, worth considering as a Jurassic Park scenario.
These folks are not saying "we shouldn't do this because of the risks." They're saying "I hope those who would take this action attempt to understand and control those risks before an adverse affect like unnatural proliferation were to occur."
You can both be right.
That’s much more thoughtful and constructive than any other comment. Thank you. I absolutely agree that two things can be true at the same time and risks are worth considering. That was not the feedback I was receiving however. I do believe the primary and most important threat to be considered here is plastic pollution and the article proposes something to aid in combating it. Who is right shouldn’t be the foremost concern in a healthy discussion. We can adjust how we implement solutions, absolutely, but shooting them down entirely gets us nowhere.