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The native submerged plant, Hydrilla verticillata outperforms its exotic confamilial with exposure to polyamide microplastic pollution: Implication for wetland revegetation and potential driving mechanism

Aquatic Toxicology 2024 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Tong Wang, Xue Yang, Shiyu Ouyang, Wangyang Huang, Guiyue Ma, Shengwen Liu, Yinuo Zhu, Yi Zhang, Haifang Li, Hongwei Yu, Hongwei Yu

Summary

Researchers found that a native aquatic plant species maintained its growth when exposed to polyamide microplastic pollution, while an invasive species declined. This suggests that native plants may be better choices for restoring waterways contaminated with microplastics. The study provides practical guidance for wetland restoration efforts in areas affected by microplastic pollution.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastic pollution and biological invasion, as two by-products of human civilization, interfere the ecological function of aquatic ecosystem. The restoration of aquatic vegetation has been considered a practical approach to offset the deterioration of aquatic ecosystem. However, a lack of knowledge still lies in the species selection in the revegetation when confronting the interference from microplastic pollution and exotic counterpart. The present study subjected the native submerged species, Hydrilla verticillata and its exotic confamilial, Elodea nuttallii to the current and future scenarios of polyamide microplastic pollution. The plant performance proxies including biomass and ramet number were measured. We found that the native H. verticillata maintained its performance while the exotic E. nuttallii showed decreases in biomass and ramet number under severest pollution conditions. The restoration of native submerged plant such as H. verticillata appeared to be more effective in stabilizing aquatic vegetation in the scenario of accelerating microplastic pollution. In order to explore the underlying driving mechanism of performance differentiation, stress tolerance indicators for plants, sediment enzymatic activity and sediment fungal microbiome were investigated. We found that polyamide microplastic had weak effects on stress tolerance indicators for plants, sediment enzymatic activity and sediment fungal diversity, reflecting the decoupling between these indicators and plant performance. However, the relative abundance of sediment arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi for H. verticillata significantly increased while E. nuttallii gathered "useless" ectomycorrhizal fungi at the presence of severest polyamide microplastic pollution. We speculate that the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi assisted the stabilization of plant performance for H. verticillata with exposure to the severest polyamide microplastic pollution.

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