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Microbes and microplastics: Community shifts along an urban coastal contaminant gradient

Environmental Microbiology 2023 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Cody E. Garrison, Maria Pachiadaki, Sammer Soliman, Anthony Helfrich, Gordon T. Taylor

Summary

A study of urban waterways around New York City found that microplastics collect more hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria the closer they are to the city, and that polyethylene and PVC plastics host distinctly different microbial communities compared to other polymer types. This suggests that microplastics in urban runoff may be selecting for specialized bacteria adapted to plastic-rich, polluted environments, potentially affecting how plastic pollution moves through and alters coastal ecosystems.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Plastic substrates introduced to the environment during the Anthropocene have introduced new pathways for microbial selection and dispersal. Some plastic-colonising microorganisms have adapted phenotypes for plastic degradation (selection), while the spatial transport (dispersal) potential of plastic colonisers remains controlled by polymer-specific density, hydrography and currents. Plastic-degrading enzyme abundances have recently been correlated with concentrations of plastic debris in open ocean environments, making it critical to better understand colonisation of hydrocarbon degraders with plastic degradation potential in urbanised watersheds where plastic pollution often originates. We found that microbial colonisation by reputed hydrocarbon degraders on microplastics (MPs) correlated with a spatial contaminant gradient (New York City/Long Island waterways), polymer types, temporal scales, microbial domains and putative cell activity (DNA vs. RNA). Hydrocarbon-degrading taxa enriched on polyethylene and polyvinyl chloride substrates relative to other polymers and were more commonly recovered in samples proximal to New York City. These differences in MP colonisation could indicate phenotypic adaptation processes resulting from increased exposure to urban plastic runoff as well as differences in carbon bioavailability across polymer types. Shifts in MP community potential across urban coastal contaminant gradients and polymer types improve our understanding of environmental plastic discharge impacts toward biogeochemical cycling across the global ocean.

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