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Temporal succession of marine microbes drives plastisphere community convergence in subtropical coastal waters
Summary
Scientists tracked how microbial communities develop on four common plastic types submerged in subtropical coastal waters over 42 days. They found that the passage of time was a bigger driver of community composition than the type of plastic, with bacterial communities on different plastics becoming more similar as biofilms matured. However, these plastic-associated communities remained distinct from those floating freely in the water, suggesting plastics create unique microbial habitats in marine environments.
Marine plastic pollution is a pervasive environmental issue, with microplastics serving as novel substrates for microbial colonization in aquatic ecosystems. This study investigates the succession of plastisphere communities on four common plastic types (polyethylene, polypropylene, polyethylene terephthalate, and polystyrene) in subtropical coastal waters of Hong Kong SAR. Over a 42-day period, we analysed the temporal development of microbial communities using a three-domain universal metabarcoding method. Our results reveal that temporal succession is a stronger driver of community structure than plastic type, with prokaryotic communities converging across different plastics as biofilms mature. Despite this convergence, plastisphere communities remain distinct from planktonic communities throughout the experiment, suggesting that plastics create unique ecological niches in marine environments. We observed differences in diversity patterns and community composition among prokaryotic, eukaryotic, and chloroplastic communities, highlighting the importance of multi-domain analyses in plastisphere research. Functional predictions suggest potential roles of prokaryotic communities in biogeochemical cycling and possible pathogenicity, highlighting the ecological and public health implications of plastisphere formation. This study provides valuable insights into the dynamics of microbial colonization across domains on marine plastics and enhances our understanding of how these anthropogenic substrates influence microbial ecology in marine ecosystems.