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Size dependent effects of nanoplastics and microplastics on the nitrogen cycle of microbial flocs

Chemosphere 2023 14 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.
Zhenlu Wang, Yong Yue, Zhenlu Wang, Zhenlu Wang, Yong Yue, Zhenlu Wang, Zhenlu Wang, Xianghong Dong, Lei Gan Lei Gan, Muzi Zhang, Xianghong Dong, Lei Gan Lei Gan, Shao Jian, Muzi Zhang, Shao Jian, Lei Gan

Summary

Researchers found that nano- and microplastics reduce the nitrogen cycling capacity of microbial flocs used in aquaculture, with smaller nanoplastics causing greater disruption than larger microplastics in a size-dependent toxicity pattern.

NANO: and microplastics (NPs/MPs) are a new type of persistent environmental pollutant. Microbial flocs are a type of microbial aggregate commonly used in aquaculture. To investigate the impact of NPs/MPs on microbial flocs with different particle sizes: NPs/MPs-80 nm (M 0.08), NPs/MPs-800 nm (M 0.8), and NPs/MPs-8 μm (M 8), NPs/MPs exposure tests (28 days) and ammonia nitrogen conversion tests (24 h) were conducted. The results showed that the particle size was significantly higher in the M 0.08 group when compared with the control group (C group). The TAN (total ammonia nitrogen) content of each group maintained the order of M 0.08 > M 0.8 > M 8 > C from days 12-20. The nitrite content in the M 0.08 group was significantly higher on day 28 than that in the other groups. In the ammonia nitrogen conversion test, the nitrite content of the C group was significantly lower than that of the NPs/MPs exposure groups. The results suggested that NPs contributed to microbial aggregation and affected microbial colonization. In addition, NPs/MPs exposure could reduce microbial nitrogen cycling capacity, with a size-dependent toxicity difference of NPs > MPs. The findings of this study are expected to fill the research gap on the mechanisms of NPs/MPs' impact on microorganisms and the nitrogen cycle in aquatic ecosystems.

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