Blow it up.
Biodegradable materials will rot, weather, or rust and 'return to nature'. Wood, paper, and even most metals are biodegradable to various degrees. Nonbiodegradable materials will not break down naturally. Most plastics and synthetic materials are nonbiodegradable.
its plastic
Because they are each recycled into different materials so if they were recycled together you would have plastic from both forms in one bottle and will make it harder or impossible for bio degradable bottles to decompose later on if thrown out.
Some of the plastic bags are made of bio degradable materials like superplast plastic factory
NO! NO! NO! Plastic is biodegradeable, but takes hundreds of years to degrade.
Yes, degradable plastic bags can still contribute to environmental problems. When they degrade, they can break down into small particles that can still harm ecosystems and wildlife, and some may release harmful chemicals during degradation. It is important to properly dispose of all types of plastic bags to minimize their environmental impact.
paper and tyres
that can use again are called dergadable plastics
Wastes that rot by the action of decomposers eg. peels of vegetables or fruit, etc are called biodegradableWastes that do not rot by the action of decomposers eg. plastic bottles, etc are called nonbiodegradable
As plastic is a non degradable material so living of sea unable to destroy them.
Something like plastic that won't break down in environment
Scientists have developed biodegradable plastics by modifying the chemical composition of traditional nonbiodegradable plastics. These modifications allow the new plastics to break down more easily through natural processes, reducing their environmental impact.