'The trouble with gribbles' may actually be a boon for biofuel industry
A couple of gribbles, whose wood-digesting enzymes could play a role in converting wood waste and straw into liquid biofuels
Article Summary
Just what, you may ask, is a gribble? It’s a tiny marine isopod, and it eats wood. For centuries, they destroyed wooden ships. Today, they continue to munch away on docks and piers. Unlike creatures such as termites, however, gribbles have no helpful microbes in their digestive system to help them digest wood - they themselves possess the enzymes necessary for converting it to sugar. British researchers are now suggesting that what works for the gribbles could also work for converting wood waste and straw into liquid biofuels.
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