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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 Gut & Microbiome Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Seabed and Beach Sediments as Dynamic Genetic Interfaces

Environments 2026 Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Antonia Mataragka, Antonia Mataragka

Summary

This review synthesizes evidence on how coastal marine sediments and beach sands serve as reservoirs for microbial communities, antibiotic resistance genes, and genetic material from wastewater, urban runoff, and other sources. Researchers found that antibiotic resistance genes can reach very high concentrations in sediments near wastewater discharge points, and viable pathogens have been cultured directly from beach sands. The study suggests these environments need integrated assessment approaches that account for how microbes and genetic material are retained, redistributed, and potentially encountered by humans.

Models
Study Type Environmental

Coastal marine sediments and beach sands receive microbial and genetic inputs from wastewater discharge, urban runoff, aquaculture, wildlife, and recreational activity, yet their role as coupled microbial–genetic interfaces linking environmental processes and human exposure remains incompletely synthesized. This review integrates quantitative evidence from culture-based studies, qPCR surveys, metagenomic analyses, and multi-year monitoring investigations focused on coastal sediments and sands. Reported antibiotic resistance gene (ARG) concentrations in coastal sediments reach 2.2 × 109 copies g−1 (wet weight) for sul1 in wastewater-impacted systems, with total ARG abundances commonly ranging from 1.59 × 107 to 2.88 × 108 copies g−1 in effluent-receiving zones and tetM reported at 1.43 × 107 copies g−1. Beach sands contain measurable resistance markers, including intI1 at 9–3823 copies g−1 and blaTEM up to 14 copies g−1 in wet sand. Viable fecal indicator bacteria and pathogens have been cultured directly from sands, including Staphylococcus aureus at 0–8710 CFU g−1 and methicillin-resistant S. aureus at 0–605 CFU g−1. Collectively, the evidence indicates that coastal sediments and sands function as structured microbial and genetic reservoirs requiring integrated assessment of benthic retention, hydrodynamic redistribution, and exposure-relevant interpretation.

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