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Microplastics shift macrobenthic community structures near a coastal nuclear power plant under construction in North East China
Summary
Researchers investigated microplastic pollution in coastal sediments near a nuclear power plant under construction in Northeast China and found that microplastic contamination shifted macrobenthic community structures, with land-based sources driving spatial distribution patterns across 20 sampling stations.
Coastal sediments are considered to be a potential sink for microplastics, which mainly derived from the land-based sources. This study investigated microplastic pollution in the sediments of 20 stations near a nuclear power plant under construction in North East China and analyzed its impacts on macrobenthic communities. The average abundance of microplastics in three stations close to the nuclear power plant was 0.33 items/g, which was approximately 10 times higher than those in the distant stations. The clustering of microplastic characteristics (sizes, shapes, and colors) showed that the three stations near the plant were in one group, and the distant stations were in another group. A total of 105 macroinvertebrate species belonging to 7 phyla were identified in all stations, and the dominant phyla were Annelida and Arthropoda. Spearman rank correlation showed that rare taxa (83 species with a contribution <1 %) were positively correlated with microplastics and As, and redundancy analysis demonstrated that the distribution patterns of macrobenthic communities were similar to those of microplastics. Moreover, co-occurrence networks showed that the rare taxa were positively correlated with microplastics. Therefore, microplastics released from the nuclear power plant under construction might shift the structure of macrobenthic communities, especially the rare taxa.