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Temporal enrichment of comammox Nitrospira and Ca. Nitrosocosmicus in a coastal plastisphere

Environmental Sciences Europe 2024 10 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Qian Yang, Yin Zhong, Shi‐wei Feng, Ping Wen, Heli Wang, Junhong Wu, Sen Yang, Jie‐Liang Liang, Dan Li, Qiong Yang, N.F.Y. Tam, Ping’an Peng

Summary

A 39-month colonization experiment in a mangrove intertidal zone found that comammox Nitrospira and Candidatus Nitrosocosmicus increasingly dominated the nitrifying community on plastic rope surfaces over time. The plastisphere exhibited high nitrification activity and N2O production, suggesting that long-term plastic colonization in coastal zones can create hotspots for ammonia oxidation with implications for marine nitrogen cycling.

Study Type Environmental

Plastic marine debris is known to harbor a unique microbiome (termed the "plastisphere") that can be important in marine biogeochemical cycles. However, the temporal dynamics in the plastisphere and their implications for marine biogeochemistry remain poorly understood. Here, we characterized the temporal dynamics of nitrifying communities in the plastisphere of plastic ropes exposed to a mangrove intertidal zone. The 39-month colonization experiment revealed that the relative abundances of Nitrospira and Candidatus Nitrosocosmicus representatives increased over time according to 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing analysis. The relative abundances of amoA genes in metagenomes implied that comammox Nitrospira were the dominant ammonia oxidizers in the plastisphere, and their dominance increased over time. The relative abundances of two metagenome-assembled genomes of comammox Nitrospira also increased with time and positively correlated with extracellular polymeric substances content of the plastisphere but negatively correlated with NH4+ concentration in seawater, indicating the long-term succession of these two parameters significantly influenced the ammonia-oxidizing community in the coastal plastisphere. At the end of the colonization experiment, the plastisphere exhibited high nitrification activity, leading to the release of N2O (2.52 ng N2O N g-1) in a 3-day nitrification experiment. The predicted relative contribution of comammox Nitrospira to N2O production (17.9%) was higher than that of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (4.8%) but lower than that of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (21.4%). These results provide evidence that from a long-term perspective, some coastal plastispheres will become dominated by comammox Nitrospira and thereby act as hotspots of ammonia oxidation and N2O production.

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