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Increasing microplastic concentrations have nonlinear impacts on the physiology of reef-building corals

Universitätsbibliothek Gießen 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Vanessa Tirpitz, Vanessa Tirpitz, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Vanessa Tirpitz, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Vanessa Tirpitz, Vanessa Tirpitz, Vanessa Tirpitz, Vanessa Tirpitz, Mona Hutter, Mona Hutter, Vanessa Tirpitz, Vanessa Tirpitz, Vanessa Tirpitz, Julia Prume, Mona Hutter, Mona Hutter, Mona Hutter, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Vanessa Tirpitz, Vanessa Tirpitz, Vanessa Tirpitz, Mona Hutter, Julia Prume, Thomas Wilke Julia Prume, Hanna Hutter, Hanna Hutter, Hanna Hutter, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Hanna Hutter, Hanna Hutter, Hanna Hutter, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Jessica Reichert, Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Thomas Wilke Julia Prume, Thomas Wilke Jessica Reichert, Martin Koch, Martin Koch, Martin Koch, Julia Prume, Thomas Wilke Julia Prume, Julia Prume, Thomas Wilke Thomas Wilke Justus Liebig University Giessen, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Thomas Wilke Thomas Wilke, Thomas Wilke Thomas Wilke Thomas Wilke Jessica Reichert, Thomas Wilke Jessica Reichert, Thomas Wilke Justus Liebig University Giessen, Thomas Wilke Justus Liebig University Giessen, Thomas Wilke Thomas Wilke Jessica Reichert, Thomas Wilke

Summary

Researchers exposed reef-building corals to increasing microplastic concentrations and found nonlinear effects on coral physiology, suggesting that low and high MP levels may have qualitatively different biological impacts. The findings complicate predictions of how coral reefs will respond as ocean MP pollution increases.

The pollution of marine environments with plastics, particularly microplastic (MP, i.e., plastic particles <5 mm), is a major threat to marine biota, including corals. While the effects of MPs are increasingly well understood, knowledge of how different concentrations of naturally occurring MP mixtures affect reef-building corals is still limited. Therefore, we aimed to elucidate the relationship of MP concentrations and their effects on reef-building corals. For this, we exposed two reef-building coral species (Stylophora pistillata and Pocillopora verrucosa) in a 12-week experiment to MPs at a gradient of concentrations (0, 0.1, 1, 10, and 100 mg⋅L􀀀 1). Specifically, we examined effects on the coral host physiology (i.e., surface and volume growth, calcification, necrosis, and polyp activity), and the photosynthetic activity of the photosymbionts (i.e., effective and maximum quantum yield, maximum relative electron transport rate, minimum saturating irradiance, and light capture efficiency). To mimic natural conditions, we used a MP mixture consisting of six polymers in forms of fibers and fragments. Both coral species showed reduced growth rates, necrosis, lower polyp activity, and an upregulation of photosynthesis, which intensified with increasing MP concentrations. While the effects on the coral host mostly showed basic linear or nonlinear dose-response relationships, the effects on the photosymbionts revealed more complex nonlinear dose-response relationships, and photosynthesis was only upregulated after a species-specific threshold. We found that high and extreme pollution scenarios caused strong adverse effects on coral physiology, while current low to moderate concentrations had minor effects. Increasing concentrations had amplifying effects, likely due to the disproportionately higher frequency of entanglement, leading to more frequent direct contact and potential transfer of toxins or pathogens. These results suggest that corals can cope with current average pollution levels. However, they also highlight the need for measures to limit permanent increases of MP pollution to protect the health of coral reefs.

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