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Microplastic-antifouling paint particle contamination alters microbial communities in surrounding marine sediment

The Science of The Total Environment 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.
Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Dieter Fischer, Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Christiane Hassenrück, Alexander S. Tagg, Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Bernd Kreikemeyer, Theodor Sperlea, Theodor Sperlea, Alexander S. Tagg, Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Bernd Kreikemeyer, Christiane Hassenrück, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Bernd Kreikemeyer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Alexander S. Tagg, Alexander S. Tagg, Bernd Kreikemeyer, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Bernd Kreikemeyer, Bernd Kreikemeyer, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Alexander S. Tagg, Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Bernd Kreikemeyer, Matthias Labrenz Dieter Fischer, Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz Matthias Labrenz

Summary

Researchers found that antifouling paint particles from boat coatings significantly altered bacterial communities in marine sediments, reducing biodiversity and favoring certain pollution-tolerant species. While focused on paint rather than microplastics per se, antifouling paint particles are a type of microplastic that carries toxic biocides into the marine environment. The disruption of sediment microbial communities could affect nutrient cycling and the health of ecosystems that support seafood species consumed by humans.

Study Type Environmental

Paint used to coat surfaces in aquatic environments often contain biocides to prevent biofouling, and as these coatings degrade, antifouling paint particles (APPs) end up in aquatic, and especially marine, sediments. However, it is currently unclear what further influence APPs in the sediment have on biotic communities or processes. This study investigates how a variety of commercially-available APPs effect the marine microbial community by spiking different laboratory-manufactured APPs to sediment. Following exposure for 30 and 60 days, APPs caused a clear and consistent effect on the bacterial community composition as determined by 16S metabarcoding. This effect was strongest between 0 and 30 days, but continues to a lesser extent between 30 and 60 days. APPs appear to inhibit the highly diverse, but in general rarer, fraction of the community and/or select for specific community members to become more dominant. 71 antifouling-presence and 454 antifouling-absence indicator taxa were identified by indicator analysis. The difference in the level of classification in these two indicator groups was highly significant, with the antifouling-presence indicators having much higher percentage sequence identity to cultured taxa, while the antifouling-absence indicators appear to be made up of undescribed taxa, which may indicate that APPs act as a proxy for general anthropogenic influence or that APP contamination selects for taxa capable of being cultured. Given the clear and consistent effect APPs have on the surrounding sediment microbial community, further research into how APPs affect sediment functional processes and how such effects scale with concentration is recommended to better assess the wider consequences of these pollutants for marine biogeochemical cycles in the future. SYNOPSIS: Microplastic-paint particles are commonly found in marine sediment but little is known about how these, especially antifouling, paint particles affect sediment microbial communities. This study demonstrates that antifouling paint particles fundamentally alter sediment microbial communities.

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