Biodegradable Materials - are capable of being broken down especially into innocuous products by the actions of living things. Examples are:
Bacteria are surprisingly adaptive organisms and can biodegrade a very wide range of materials which would not ordinarily be thought of as biodegradable. As bacteria can "eat" them they can be put into the biodegradable class as well.
It is fairly common knowledge that some bacteria adapt to eat heavy hydrocarbons from oil spills and are used to clean up this type of environmental problem. Similar bacteria can even eat asphalt in a high concentration of sodium chloride. Deep sea bacteria near black smokers (volcanic vents) consume toxic sulfides as a source of energy. Some bacteria even eat iron and sulphur compounds. Examples are Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans (also known as. Thiobacillus ferrooxidans) and Acidithiobacillus thiooxidans (also known as Thiobacillus thiooxidans or Thiobacillus concretivorus) excreting iron and sulfuric acid.
human waste,
manure,
sewage,
slaughterhouse waste,
green waste,
food waste,
paper
waste,
jute & cotton
waste
YES Silk is a biodegradable material as it mixes with soil easily
Some example of BIO-DEGRADABLE THINGS: paper, juice, chicken bones, clothes... anything that can be broken down by organisms NON BIO-DEGRADABLE THINGS: plastic toys, plastic bags, glass, steel, synthetic rubber.
No
A cloth bag is an example of non-biodegradable waste.
A biodegradable is a material which is capable of being decomposed by biological activity.
An item that is not biodegradable is something that cannot be easily broken down by living organisms. A usual can is aluminum and this material is not biodegradable.
No, nylon is not biodegradable. It is a synthetic material that does not break down easily in the environment.
leaves
starch
YES Silk is a biodegradable material as it mixes with soil easily
Non-biodegradable materials are things that can't be broken down easily by natural processes. For example, plastic shopping bags would take thousands of years to be degraded (broken down). Some examples of non-biodegradable materials are: plastic polystyrene (styrofoam) metals foams glasses silicon-based materials/circuit boards oil ashes
aluminium cans