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From:
The Globe and Mail, Monday, February 15, 1993
Modern plastics not clean enough? Try good old wood -
The Economist Appearances can be deceptive.
Householders have been seduced for years by the idea
of fitting out their kitchens with easy-to-wipe
surfaces and throwing out those old wooden cutting
boards in favor of shiny new plastic ones. So much
more hygienic, it is thought. Dean Cliver and Nese Ak,
two researchers at the University of Wisconsin
Madison, beg to differ. They set out to find ways of
decontaminating wooden kitchen surfaces and ended up
finding that such surfaces are pretty good at
decontaminating themselves. Working with wood from
nine different species of tree, and with four sorts of
plastic and even an old rubber chopping board, the
results were always the same. When they spread their
gut-wrenching bacteria - salmonella, listeria and E.
coli - over the various samples and left them there
for three minutes the level of bacteria on the plastic
or rubber remained unchanged while the level on the
wood plummeted, often by as much as 99.9 percent. Left
overnight at room temperature, the bacteria on the
plastic actually multiplied, while the wooden surfaces
cleaned themselves so thoroughly that Dr. Cliver and
Ms. AK could not recover anything from them. At first
sight, these results seemed astonishing. But, unlike
polymer chemists, plants have spent hundreds of
millions of years fighting off bacteria. They should
be quite good at it by now. And trees might be
expected to be the best of the lot. After all, they
live longer - not only longer than most plants, but
longer than most animals as well. Even when a tree is
dead, its wood can hang around for decades, resisting
the attacks of micro-organisms. Slaughtering a few
salmonella should be child's play. Dr. Clever and Ms.
Ak do not yet know exactly what is happening, but
their guess is that the porous structure of the wood
is soaking up the fluid with bacteria in it. Once
inside, the bacteria stick to the wood's fibers and
are "strangled" by on of the many noxiouls
anti-microbial chemicals with which living trees
protect themselves--exactly which, they have not yet
worked out, but they are searching. In the meantime,
perhaps surgeons should search out their old chopping
blocks.
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