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Plastic and terrestrial organic matter degradation by the humic lake microbiome continues throughout the seasons

Environmental Microbiology Reports 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Miikka B. Laine, Sami J. Taipale Sami J. Taipale Sami J. Taipale Sami J. Taipale Sami J. Taipale Jussi S. Vesamäki, Jussi S. Vesamäki, Riitta Nissinen, Jussi S. Vesamäki, Miikka B. Laine, Riitta Nissinen, Sami J. Taipale Sami J. Taipale Sami J. Taipale Riitta Nissinen, Sami J. Taipale Jussi S. Vesamäki, Jussi S. Vesamäki, Sami J. Taipale Jussi S. Vesamäki, Sami J. Taipale

Summary

A year-round study of boreal lake microbiomes found that microbial communities decomposed polyethylene, polystyrene, and plant litter across all four seasons, suggesting plastic degradation in freshwater is not limited to warmer months.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Boreal freshwaters go through four seasons, however, studies about the decomposition of terrestrial and plastic compounds often focus only on summer. We compared microbial decomposition of <sup>13</sup>C-polyethylene, <sup>13</sup>C-polystyrene, and <sup>13</sup>C-plant litter (Typha latifolia) by determining the biochemical fate of the substrate carbon and identified the microbial decomposer taxa in humic lake waters in four seasons. For the first time, the annual decomposition rate including separated seasonal variation was calculated for microplastics and plant litter in the freshwater system. Polyethylene decomposition was not detected, whereas polystyrene and plant litter were degraded in all seasons. In winter, decomposition rates of polystyrene and plant litter were fivefold and fourfold slower than in summer, respectively. Carbon from each substrate was mainly respired in all seasons. Plant litter was utilized efficiently by various microbial groups, whereas polystyrene decomposition was limited to Alpha- and Gammaproteobacteria. The decomposition was not restricted only to the growth season, highlighting that the decomposition of both labile organic matter and extremely recalcitrant microplastics continues throughout the seasons.

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