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. Environmental Sources Gut & Microbiome Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Temperature-dependent effects of microplastics on sediment bacteriome and metabolome

Chemosphere 2024 17 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Feng Guo, Biao Liu, Jiaying Zhao, Yiran Hou, Junfeng Wu, Hongwei Hu, Changrui Zhou, Hui Hu, Tingting Zhang, Ziyan Yang

Summary

Researchers investigated how different types of microplastics, including polyethylene, polylactic acid, and tire particles, affect sediment microbial communities and metabolic processes at different temperatures. The study found that temperature strongly influences certain enzyme activities while microplastic type affects others, with tire particles in particular significantly altering microbial community composition and metabolic pathways in wetland sediments.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The increasing prevalence of microplastics in the environment has become a concern for various ecosystems, including wetland ecosystems. Here, we investigated the effects of three popular microplastic types: polyethylene, polylactic acid, and tire particles at 5 °C and 25 °C on the sediment microbiome and metabolome at the 3% (w/w) level. Results indicated that temperature greatly influenced catalase and neutral phosphatase activities, whereas the type of microplastic had a more significant impact on urease and dehydrogenase activities. The addition of microplastic, especially tire particles, increased microbial diversity and significantly altered the microbial community structure and metabolic profile, leading to the formation of different clusters of microbial communities depending on the temperature. Nonetheless, the effect of temperature on the metabolite composition was less significant. Functional prediction showed that the abundance of functional genes related to metabolism and biogeochemical cycling increased with increasing temperature, especially the tire particles treatment group affected the nitrogen cycling by inhibiting ureolysis and nitrogen fixation. These observations emphasize the need to consider microplastic type and ambient temperature to fully understand the ecological impact of microplastics on microbial ecosystems.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Effects of polyethylene, polylactic acid, and tire particles on the sediment microbiome and metabolome at high and low temperatures

This study examined how three common types of microplastics (polyethylene, polylactic acid, and tire particles) affect bacteria and chemical processes in wetland sediment at different temperatures. The microplastics changed the types and diversity of bacteria in the sediment and altered chemical activity, with the effects varying depending on temperature. These findings matter because changes to sediment microbes can disrupt wetland ecosystems that help filter water before it reaches communities.

Article Tier 2

Impact of Microplastic on Freshwater Sediment Biogeochemistry and Microbial Communities Is Polymer Specific

Researchers used a microcosm approach to test how three common plastic types found in Great Lakes sediments affect freshwater benthic biogeochemistry and microbial communities. They found that each polymer had distinct effects: PET fibers decreased ecosystem metabolism, PVC particles increased nutrient uptake, and tire-derived rubber most substantially altered microbial community function. The study highlights that the environmental impact of microplastics in freshwater sediments depends heavily on the specific polymer type involved.

Article Tier 2

The effects of three different microplastics on enzyme activities and microbial communities in soil

Researchers added three types of microplastics (film PE, fiber PP, and sphere PP) to loamy and sandy soils and measured effects on enzyme activities and microbial communities, finding that all three types altered microbial community structure and nutrient-cycling enzyme activities in soil-type-dependent ways.

Article Tier 2

Impacts of microplastics addition on sediment environmental properties, enzymatic activities and bacterial diversity

Researchers conducted a 60-day experiment to assess how adding different types of microplastics to river sediment affects its chemical properties, enzyme activity, and bacterial communities. They found that microplastics altered nutrient cycling, changed enzyme activity levels, and shifted the composition of sediment microbial communities. The study demonstrates that microplastic accumulation in sediments can disrupt the biological processes that maintain healthy aquatic ecosystems.

Article Tier 2

Effects of microplastics on nitrogen and phosphorus cycles and microbial communities in sediments

Researchers found that PVC, PLA, and polypropylene microplastics altered nitrogen and phosphorus cycling in freshwater sediments by shifting microbial community composition, with effects varying by polymer type and biodegradability.

Share this paper