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 Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Polyamide microplastic pollution modifies the sediment fungal structures associated with different submerged plant species: an insight from aquatic mesocosm experiment

Mendeley Data 2025 Score: 38 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Wang, Tong

Summary

Researchers compiled DNA sequence datasets for sediment bacteria and fungi associated with four submerged aquatic plant species under varying levels of polyamide microplastic pollution in an aquatic mesocosm experiment, providing raw data to support analysis of how microplastic contamination modifies microbial community structures in aquatic sediments.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

DNA sequences for sediment bacteria and fungi associated with different submerged plant species in different scenarios of polyamide microplastic (PA) pollution In the two zip files including RawData1 (bacteria) and RawData2 (fungi), MS refers to Myriophyllum spicatum L., PM refers to Potamogeton wrightii Morong, PMa refers to Potamogeton maackianus A. Benn., and SP refers to Stuckenia pectinata (L.) Börner. 0.1 means the 1st replicate of CK (no polyamide microplastic (PA) addition), 0.2 means the 2nd replicate of CK, 0.3 means the 3rd replicate of CK, and 0.4 means the 4th replicate of CK. 1.1 means the 1st replicate of PA1 (a 0.6122 g. L-1 of PA addition), 1.2 means the 2nd replicate of PA1, 1.3 means the 3rd replicate of PA1, and 1.4 means the 4th replicate of PA1. 2.1 means the 1st replicate of PA2 (a 1.2244 g. L-1 of PA addition), 2.2 means the 2nd replicate of PA2, 2.3 means the 3rd replicate of PA2, and 2.4 means the 4th replicate of PA2. 3.1 means the 1st replicate of PA3 (a 1.8366 g. L-1 of PA addition), 3.2 means the 2nd replicate of PA3, 3.3 means the 3rd replicate of PA3, and 3.4 means the 4th replicate of PA3. 4.1 means the 1st replicate of PA4 (a 2.4488 g. L-1 of PA addition), 4.2 means the 2nd replicate of PA4, 4.3 means the 3rd replicate of PA4, and 4.4 means the 4th replicate of PA4.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Polyamide microplastic pollution modifies the sediment fungal structures associated with different submerged plant species: an insight from aquatic mesocosm experiment

Researchers compiled DNA sequence datasets for sediment bacteria and fungi associated with four submerged aquatic plant species under varying levels of polyamide microplastic pollution in an aquatic mesocosm experiment, providing raw data to support analysis of how microplastic contamination modifies microbial community structures in aquatic sediments.

Article Tier 2

Investigation of Soil-Dwelling Bacterial Community Changes Induced by Microplastic Ex posure Using Amplicon Sequencing

Researchers analyzed soil bacterial community composition after microplastic contamination, finding that different polymer types caused distinct shifts in microbial diversity and functional groups, with implications for soil nutrient cycling and agricultural productivity.

Article Tier 2

Microplastics alter composition of fungal communities in aquatic ecosystems

This study examined how microplastics affect fungal communities in rivers, the Baltic Sea, and a wastewater treatment plant, finding that plastics altered fungal diversity and community composition. The results suggest microplastics can disrupt aquatic fungal ecology, with potential downstream effects on nutrient cycling and ecosystem function.

Article Tier 2

Effects of microplastics on bacterial communities in lake wetland sediments: a comparison between drought and flooded conditions

Researchers established a sediment microcosm system for Poyang Lake wetland and examined the effects of polyethylene and polypropylene microplastics on bacterial community structure, functional genes, and ecological processes over 180 days under both simulated drought and flooded conditions.

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