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Data from: Microplastics reduce eelgrass tolerance to heat stress with implications for restoration and blue carbon

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Luis G Egea

Summary

A controlled mesocosm experiment showed that polyethylene/polypropylene microplastics in sediment reduced eelgrass root length by 65% and depleted energy reserves, with combined exposure to microplastics and a marine heatwave producing the most severe damage to below-ground biomass.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

We experimentally tested how these stressors, alone and combined, affect the seagrass Zostera marina (eelgrass) using a controlled mesocosm experiment grounded in multiple-stressor and trait-based ecological theory. Plants were grown for 43 days in sediments with or without polyethylene/polypropylene MPs and a simulated MHW, (+5ºC for 15 days) was imposed in the final phase. MPs exposure markedly reduced rhizome elongation (-35%), total root length (-65%), and below-ground biomass, and depleted non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) in leaves and rhizomes (-35% to -40%). Warming alone stimulated leaf growth but further reduced NSC, while the MP × MHW interaction produced the lowest below-ground growth and carbohydrate reserves, consistent with synergistic stress predicted by multiple-stressor theory. MP exposure also reshaped the microbiome enriching putative sulfur-cycling taxa in the rhizosphere and indicating more reducing sediment conditions. With a carbon-balance and holobiont framework, MPs appears to constrain resource supply (oxygen and nutrients) and increase maintenance costs, whereas warming amplifies metabolic demand. The resulting carbon deficit limits below-ground growth, traits that underpin restoration success and blue-carbon function. These findings show the importance to incorporate microplastic monitoring into seagrass management to anticipate cumulative stress under a warming ocean.

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Data from: Microplastics reduce eelgrass tolerance to heat stress with implications for restoration and blue carbon

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