Did they find out by studying the expulsion of methane from Uranus?Greg Tito said:Panda Poop May Solve World Energy Crisis
Yeah right, and biofuel-making microbes might fly out of a panda's butt!
In case you hadn't noticed, we as a people use too much fossil fuels to power our cars and electronic communication devices. The dependence on petroleum and coal not only causes geo-political conflict, but burning them releases all kinds of bad things into the air. Global warming aside, that much smoke in our lungs is generally a bad thing. The answer many have turned to in the last decade or so has been so-called biofuels made from crops we can grow easily like corn, soybeans and sugar. But that process creates a lot of waste too, and we haven't figured out how to derive enough energy from these sources to make it profitable. What's the answer? Well, apparently, the answer is panda crap.
Or more precisely, the bacteria found in the excrement of giant pandas. A study presented at a meeting of the American Chemical Society by Ashli Brown, a biochemist from Mississippi State University, claims that the microbe found in panda kaka could advance the process of making biofuels from all kinds of tough plant materials previously thought unsuitable like switch grass, corn stalks and wood chips.
"Who would have guessed that 'panda poop' might help solve one of the major hurdles to producing biofuels, which is optimizing the breakdown of the raw plant materials used to make the fuels?" said Brown.
For years, scientists assumed that high-powered bacteria must exist in panda manure because their primary food source is bamboo - the entire plant including stems, leaves and shoots. For the panda's stomach to break down all the stiff cellulose cells that support a bamboo stalk, the little buggers must have some serious mojo. But until the renewed interest in biofuels, figuring out exactly what bacteria was at work in panda shit wasn't that important.
For Brown, the discovery should shed light on our need to protect all species because we never know where the next breakthrough will come. "Animals and plants are a major source of medicines and other products that people depend on. When we lose them to extinction, we may lose potential sources of these products," she said, even though she had to look at the panda turds every day for the last year.
For me, this story has allowed the use of as many synonyms for feces that I could possibly come up with. Here are some more, just in case: poopy-stinky, bum brownie, cagadita, crapola, dookie, floater, majon, Mississippi mud, sewer serpents, scheisse, Cleveland Steamer, Dirty Sanchez, tootsie roll, milky way, turtle head and brown trout.
Also, poop. Hee hee.
Source: American Chemical Society [http://portal.acs.org/portal/acs/corg/content?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=PP_ARTICLEMAIN&node_id=222&content_id=CNBP_028097&use_sec=true&sec_url_var=region1&__uuid=0a00cfd6-d30b-4e91-bd51-453705498778]
(Image [http://www.flickr.com/photos/pagedooley/5402340884/sizes/m/in/photostream/])
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Or the Chinese will cage up all their pandas in tiny cages and stick tubes up their asses, not much unlike how they treat their bile-bears [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bile_bear].TJC said:Either that or fire up their cloning machine to have enough pandas to make money from them, depending on what's bringing more moneypretentiousname01 said:And here is where big oil takes out a collective hit on the panda population to ensure their extinction.
syrus27 said:Out of all the recent "This will solve energy/fuel/food/cancer" crisis that the news team has thrown up, this is far the most bullshit.
Are these so called 'scientist' aware of how endangered EVERY BREED of Panda is. This solution (if if is assumed to be true and not, as is likely, utterly fabricated) will never be viable.
Once again I beg the news team to apply a little critical analysis to what they read on the big bad web...
Yes, Pandas are hugely endangered. No, there aren't enough of them to make their existence an industrial process. BUT SO WHAT? This isn't about Pandas, it's about the microbes in their poo. You can culture bacterial species en masse in vats. Nobody will (pardon the incoming pun) give a shit any more than they already do about the Pandas for very long. Some companies may spend vast amounts of money on making a lot of animals, but they'll be the little kind. The VERY little kind. (And yes I'm aware that bacteria are prokaryotic and not animals but c'mon!)Criquefreak said:We're going to solve the energy crisis of a non-renewable resource by replacing it with an even more limited resource?
I'm concerned that scientists are wasting time and money pursuing a nearly dead end with this one. If there were research finding household pets' leavings could be used instead, suddenly changing litter boxes and pet cages would be a chore people would jump for joy to do.
What did you expect?syrus27 said:Out of all the recent "This will solve energy/fuel/food/cancer" crisis that the news team has thrown up, this is far the most bullshit.
Are these so called 'scientist' aware of how endangered EVERY BREED of Panda is. This solution (if if is assumed to be true and not, as is likely, utterly fabricated) will never be viable.
Once again I beg the news team to apply a little critical analysis to what they read on the big bad web...
I'll take that bet - and hopefully your money =Dsyrus27 said:Fair point, but I bet you £50 that it never happens.House_Vet said:syrus27 said:Out of all the recent "This will solve energy/fuel/food/cancer" crisis that the news team has thrown up, this is far the most bullshit.
Are these so called 'scientist' aware of how endangered EVERY BREED of Panda is. This solution (if if is assumed to be true and not, as is likely, utterly fabricated) will never be viable.
Once again I beg the news team to apply a little critical analysis to what they read on the big bad web...Yes, Pandas are hugely endangered. No, there aren't enough of them to make their existence an industrial process. BUT SO WHAT? This isn't about Pandas, it's about the microbes in their poo. You can culture bacterial species en masse in vats. Nobody will (pardon the incoming pun) give a shit any more than they already do about the Pandas for very long. Some companies may spend vast amounts of money on making a lot of animals, but they'll be the little kind. The VERY little kind. (And yes I'm aware that bacteria are prokaryotic and not animals but c'mon!)Criquefreak said:We're going to solve the energy crisis of a non-renewable resource by replacing it with an even more limited resource?
I'm concerned that scientists are wasting time and money pursuing a nearly dead end with this one. If there were research finding household pets' leavings could be used instead, suddenly changing litter boxes and pet cages would be a chore people would jump for joy to do.
The hell's wrong with pandas?!jamiedf said:great, now we have to try and save the little fucks, i already didnt like pandas, now the universe is just trying to piss us off by making them important, SCREW YOU UNIVERSE