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Microplastics Weaken the Adaptability of Cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. to Ocean Warming
Summary
Researchers found that microplastic exposure weakened the ability of the marine cyanobacterium Synechococcus to adapt to warming ocean temperatures. When microplastics were combined with higher water temperatures, carbon fixation dropped by up to 15% compared to warming alone, and photosynthesis pigments declined further. The study suggests that microplastic pollution could compound the damaging effects of climate change on ocean phytoplankton, which play a critical role in global carbon cycling.
Ocean warming (OW) caused by anthropogenic activities threatens ocean ecosystems. Moreover, microplastic (MP) pollution in the global ocean is also increasing. However, the combined effects of OW and MPs on marine phytoplankton are unclear. Synechococcus sp., the most ubiquitous autotrophic cyanobacterium, was used to evaluate the response to OW + MPs under two warming scenarios (28 and 32 °C compared to 24 °C). The enhancement of the cell growth rate and carbon fixation under OW were weakened by MP exposure. Specifically, OW + MPs reduced carbon fixation by 10.9 and 15.4% at 28 and 32 °C, respectively. In addition, reduction in photosynthesis pigment contents of Synechococcus sp. under OW was intensified under OW + MPs, supporting the lower growth rate and carbon fixation under OW + MPs. Transcriptome plasticity (the evolutionary and adaptive potential of gene expression in response to changing environments) enabled Synechococcus sp. to develop a warming-adaptive transcriptional profile (downregulation of photosynthesis and CO2 fixation) under OW. Nevertheless, the downregulation of photosynthesis and CO2 fixation were alleviated under OW + MPs to increase responsiveness to the adverse effect. Due to the high abundances of Synechococcus sp. and its contributions to primary production, these findings are important for understanding the effects of MPs on carbon fixation and ocean carbon fluxes under global warming.
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