Abstract: | The biodegradability of solution-cast films of poly(D (–)-3-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) blended with the melt-compatible component atactic poly(epichlorohydrin) (aPECH) was investigated. A bacterium which produced extracellular enzymes that degraded PHB even when blended with aPECH was isolated, and tentatively designated as Aureobacterium saperdae. The growth rate of A. saperdae decreased with increasing aPECH content in the blend, up to films containing 60 wt.-% aPECH, at which composition growth was completely inhibited. The decrease in the bacterial growth rate could be due to the dilution of PHB molecules on the blend film surface caused by the presence of aPECH molecules. At the stationary phase of bacterial growth the percentage of weight loss of blend films decreased with increasing aPECH fraction, which was probably due to the lower accessibility of PHB when blended with aPECH. During the bacterial growth only PHB was metabolized, whereas neither degradation nor abiotic release of aPECH was detected for blend films. |