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Continuous generation and release of microplastics and nanoplastics from polystyrene by plastic-degrading marine bacteria

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2023 69 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sufang Zhao, Lei Wang Sufang Zhao, Lei Wang Sufang Zhao, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Sufang Zhao, Sufang Zhao, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Shiwei Lv, Lei Wang Sufang Zhao, Sufang Zhao, Lei Wang Sufang Zhao, Sufang Zhao, Sufang Zhao, Renju Liu, Renju Liu, Renju Liu, Lei Wang Lei Wang Kexin Cui, Lei Wang Yufei Li, Yufei Li, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Zongze Shao, Quanfu Wang, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Sufang Zhao, Sufang Zhao, Sufang Zhao, Lei Wang Lei Wang Renju Liu, Shiwei Lv, Yufei Li, Sufang Zhao, Sufang Zhao, Sufang Zhao, Shiwei Lv, Quanfu Wang, Renju Liu, Lei Wang Sufang Zhao, Lei Wang Lei Wang Yufei Li, Sufang Zhao, Lei Wang Zongze Shao, Lei Wang Zongze Shao, Zongze Shao, Quanfu Wang, Bin Zhi, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Renju Liu, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Bin Zhi, Lei Wang Lei Wang Rongxiang Hu, Rongxiang Hu, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Bin Zhi, Bin Zhi, Lei Wang Lei Wang Renju Liu, Quanfu Wang, Lei Wang Lei Wang Zongze Shao, Lei Wang Lei Wang Bin Zhi, Lei Wang Rongxiang Hu, Lei Wang Bin Zhi, Lei Wang Lei Wang Zongze Shao, Rongxiang Hu, Lei Wang Quanfu Wang, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Bin Zhi, Lei Wang Lei Wang Renju Liu, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Renju Liu, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Li Gu, Sufang Zhao, Sufang Zhao, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Zongze Shao, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang Quanfu Wang, Quanfu Wang, Quanfu Wang, Zongze Shao, Zongze Shao, Lei Wang Lei Wang Lei Wang

Summary

Researchers discovered that marine bacteria capable of degrading plastics continuously generate and release microplastics and nanoplastics as they break down polystyrene. Rather than fully eliminating the plastic, the bacterial degradation process fragments it into smaller particles. The findings reveal an overlooked source of secondary micro- and nanoplastic pollution in ocean environments.

Polymers

Plastic waste released into the environments breaks down into microplastics due to weathering, ultraviolet (UV) radiation, mechanical abrasion, and animal grazing. However, little is known about the plastic fragmentation mediated by microbial degradation. Marine plastic-degrading bacteria may have a double-edged effect in removing plastics. In this study, two ubiquitous marine bacteria, Alcanivorax xenomutans and Halomonas titanicae, were confirmed to degrade polystyrene (PS) and lead to microplastic and nanoplastic generation. Biodegradation occurred during bacterial growth with PS as the sole energy source, and the formation of carboxyl and carboxylic acid groups, decreased heat resistance, generation of PS metabolic intermediates in cultures, and plastic weight loss were observed. The generation of microplastics was dynamic alongside PS biodegradation. The size of the released microplastics gradually changed from microsized plastics on the first day (1344 nm and 1480 nm, respectively) to nanoplastics on the 30th day (614 nm and 496 nm, respectively) by the two tested strains. The peak release from PS films reached 6.29 × 10 particles/L and 7.64 × 10 particles/L from degradation by A. xenomutans (Day 10) and H. titanicae (Day 5), respectively. Quantification revealed that 1.3% and 1.9% of PS was retained in the form of micro- and nanoplastics, while 4.5% and 1.9% were mineralized by A. xenomutans and H. titanicae at the end of incubation, respectively. This highlights the negative effects of microbial degradation, which results in the continuous release of numerous microplastics, especially nanoplastics, as a notable secondary pollution into marine ecosystems. Their fates in the vast aquatic system and their impact on marine lives are noted for further study.

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