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Microplastics reduce eelgrass tolerance to heat stress with implications for restoration and blue carbon

Environmental Research 2026
Luis G. Egea, Rocío Jiménez‐Ramos, Lucía Rodríguez-Arias, Eduardo Infantes

Summary

Researchers found that microplastic pollution in sediments significantly reduced eelgrass root growth and energy reserves, and when combined with simulated marine heatwaves, the effects were even more severe. The study suggests that microplastics may undermine seagrass restoration efforts and blue carbon storage by depleting the underground energy reserves that these ecosystems depend on for recovery and growth.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Seagrass beds are key blue-carbon ecosystems, yet their resilience is increasingly challenged by microplastic (MP) pollution and marine heatwaves (MHWs). We experimentally tested how these stressors, alone and combined, affect the seagrass Zostera marina (eelgrass) using a controlled mesocosm experiment grounded in multiple-stressor and trait-based ecological theory. Plants were grown for 43 days in sediments with or without polyethylene/polypropylene MPs and a simulated MHW, (+5 °C for 15 days) was imposed in the final phase. MP exposure significantly reduced rhizome elongation (-35%), total root length (-65%), and below-ground biomass, and depleted non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) in leaves and rhizomes (-35% to -40%). Warming alone stimulated leaf growth but further reduced NSC, while the MP × MHW interaction produced the lowest below-ground growth and carbohydrate reserves, consistent with synergistic stress predicted by multiple-stressor theory. MP exposure also reshaped the microbiome enriching putative sulfur-cycling taxa in the rhizosphere and indicating more reducing sediment conditions. With a carbon-balance and holobiont framework, MPs appear to constrain resource supply (oxygen and nutrients) and increase maintenance costs, whereas warming amplifies metabolic demand. The resulting carbon deficit limits below-ground growth, traits that underpin restoration success and blue-carbon function. These findings show the importance of incorporating microplastic monitoring into seagrass management to anticipate cumulative stress under a warming ocean.

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