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Long-term exposure to nanoplastics reshapes the microbial interaction network of activated sludge

Environmental Pollution 2022 39 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.
Xiaohui Wang, Yongkui Yang Daying Chen, Daying Chen, Liang Chen, Xiaohui Wang, Yongkui Yang Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Liang Chen, Liang Chen, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Zizhang Wei, Zizhang Wei, Xiaohui Wang, Zhimin Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Zhimin Wang, Liang Chen, Xiaohui Wang, Liang Chen, Yongkui Yang Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Liang Chen, Liang Chen, Daying Chen, Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Yongkui Yang Lin Zhao, Liang Chen, Lin Zhao, Liang Chen, Xiaohui Wang, Lin Zhao, Yongkui Yang Xiaohui Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Yongkui Yang Lin Zhao, Liang Chen, Yongkui Yang

Summary

Researchers found that long-term nanoplastic exposure over 140 days progressively degraded activated sludge treatment performance, reducing nitrogen and phosphorus removal by reshaping microbial interaction networks into smaller, less complex structures.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Wastewater treatment plants have been identified as an important gathering spot for nanoplastics, possibly having unintended impacts on important biological nutrient removal processes. The underlying effects of long-term exposure of activated sludge to nanoplastics on nutrient removal and the mechanisms involved remain unclear. This study investigated the effect of polystyrene nanoplastics (Nano-PS) on the treatment performance and microbial community structure, and network in activated sludge. The results indicate that 1000 μg/L Nano-PS had chronic negative effects on the treatment performance in a continuous test over 140 days. Nano-PS had no significant impact in the earlier stages (0-50 days). However, as exposure time increased, the removal efficiencies of chemical oxygen demand, total phosphorous, and total nitrogen (TN) decreased by 2.7, 33.2, and 23.5%, respectively, in the later stages (87-132 days). These adverse impacts further manifested as a change in the topological characteristics, forming a smaller scale, lower complexity, and weaker transfer efficiency of the microbial network. Moreover, the scale and complexity of subnetwork-nitrogen removal bacteria and subnetwork-nitrifier were inhibited, leading to an increase in the effluent TN and NH-N. The decreased modules and connectors (keystone taxa) likely caused the deterioration of treatment performance and functional diversity, which was consistent with the change in PICRUSt results. Less competition, denser nodes, and more complex module structures were induced as a strategy to mediate the long-term stress of nano-PS. To our knowledge, this is the first attempt to explore the long-term effects of nano-PS on the microbial interaction network of activated sludge, laying an experimental foundation for reducing the risks associated with nanoplastics.

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