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Plastic-microbe interaction in the marine environment: Research methods and opportunities

Chinese Chemical Letters 2022 23 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Jonas Koh Zhi Xiang, Sakcham Bairoliya, Zin Thida Cho, Bin Cao

Summary

Researchers examined microplastic contamination in streams draining watersheds with different proportions of urban, agricultural, and forested land cover, finding that urbanization was the dominant predictor of in-stream microplastic concentrations. The relationship was strongest for fiber-type particles, consistent with wastewater effluent and stormwater runoff as the primary land-use-linked sources.

Study Type Environmental

Approximately 9 million metric tons of plastics enters the ocean annually, and once in the marine environment, plastic surfaces can be quickly colonised by marine microorganisms, forming a biofilm. Studies on plastic debris-biofilm associations, known as plastisphere, have increased exponentially within the last few years. In this review, we first briefly summarise methods and techniques used in exploring plastic-microbe interactions. Then we highlight research gaps and provide future research opportunities for marine plastisphere studies, especially, on plastic characterisation and standardised biodegradation tests, the fate of "environmentally friendly" plastics, and plastisphere of coastal habitats. Located in the tropics, Southeast Asian (SEA) countries are significant contributors to marine plastic debris. However, plastisphere studies in this region are lacking and therefore, we discuss how the unique environmental conditions in the SEA seas may affect plastic-microbe interaction and why there is an imperative need to conduct plastisphere studies in SEA marine environments. Finally, we also highlight the lack of understanding of the pathogenicity and ecotoxicological effects of plastisphere on marine ecosystems.

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