0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Biofilm of petroleum-based and bio-based microplastics in seawater in response to Zn(II): Biofilm formation, community structure, and microbial function

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 6 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.
Wang-Chao Chu, Wang-Chao Chu, Yuxin Wu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Wang-Chao Chu, Wang-Chao Chu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Wang-Chao Chu, Wang-Chao Chu, Feifei Liu, Yuanyuan Gao Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Yuxin Wu, Feifei Liu, Wang-Chao Chu, Yuxin Wu, Yuxin Wu, Wang-Chao Chu, Wang-Chao Chu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Wang-Chao Chu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Yuanyuan Gao Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Yuanyuan Gao Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Yuanyuan Gao Feifei Liu, Feifei Liu, Yuanyuan Gao

Summary

Researchers compared biofilm formation on petroleum-based and bio-based microplastics submerged in seawater under different temperature conditions meant to simulate climate change scenarios. Bio-based plastics supported distinct biofilm communities compared to conventional plastics, and elevated temperatures accelerated biofilm development and altered microbial diversity on both plastic types.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastic biofilms are novel vectors for the transport and spread of pathogenic and drug-resistant bacteria. With the increasing use of bio-based plastics, there is an urgent need to investigate the microbial colonization characteristics of these materials in seawater, particularly in comparison with conventional petroleum-based plastics. Furthermore, the effect of co-occurring contaminants, such as heavy metals, on the formation of microplastic biofilms and bacterial communities remains unclear. In this study, we compared the biofilm bacterial community structure of petroleum-based polyethylene (PE) and bio-based polylactic acid (PLA) in seawater under the influence of zinc ions (Zn). Our findings indicate that the biofilm on PLA microplastics in the late stage was impeded by the formation of a mildly acidic microenvironment resulting from the hydrolysis of the ester group on PLA. The PE surface had higher bacterial abundance and diversity, with a more intricate symbiotic pattern. The bacterial structures on the two types of microplastics were different; PE was more conducive to the colonization of anaerobic bacteria, whereas PLA was more favorable for the colonization of aerobic and acid-tolerant species. Furthermore, Zn increased the proportion of the dominant genera that could utilize microplastics as a carbon source, such as Alcanivorax and Nitratireductor. PLA had a greater propensity to harbor and disseminate pathogenic and drug-resistant bacteria, and Zn promoted the enrichment and spread of harmful bacteria such as, Pseudomonas and Clostridioides. Therefore, further research is essential to fully understand the potential environmental effects of bio-based microplastics and the role of heavy metals in the dynamics of bacterial colonization.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper