0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Sign in to save

Changes in microbial community structure of bio‐fouled polyolefins over a year‐long seawater incubation in Hawai'i

Waste Management 2024 6 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Elizabeth Connors, Laurent Lebreton, Jeff S. Bowman, Sarah‐Jeanne Royer

Summary

A year-long experiment tracked microbial biofilm succession on polypropylene and polyethylene debris floating in Hawaiian seawater, finding that plastic type was more important than shape for bacterial community structure. All plastics were dominated by the diatom Nitzschia, and polyethylene plastics showed higher differential abundance of the known plastic-degrading bacterium Hyphomonas compared to polypropylene.

Study Type Environmental

Plastic waste, especially positively buoyant polymers known as polyolefins, are a major component of floating debris in the marine environment. While plastic colonisation by marine microbes is well documented from environmental samples, the succession of marine microbial community structure over longer time scales (> > 1 month) and across different types and shapes of plastic debris is less certain. We analysed 16S rRNA and 18S rRNA amplicon gene sequences from biofilms on polyolefin debris floating in a flow-through seawater tank in Hawai'i to assess differences in microbial succession across the plastic types of polypropylene (PP) and both high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and low-density polyethylene (LDPE) made of different plastic shapes (rod, film and cube) under the same environmental conditions for 1 year. Regardless of type or shape, all plastic debris were dominated by the eukaryotic diatom Nitzschia, and only plastic type was significantly important for bacterial community structure over time (p = 0.005). PE plastics had higher differential abundance when compared to PP for 20 bacterial and eight eukaryotic taxa, including the known plastic degrading bacterial taxon Hyphomonas (p = 0.01). Results from our study provide empirical evidence that plastic type may be more important for bacterial than eukaryotic microbial community succession on polyolefin pollution under similar conditions.

Share this paper