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Into the Plastisphere, Where Only the Generalists Thrive: Early Insights in Plastisphere Microbial Community Succession

Frontiers in Marine Science 2022 76 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Beatrix Theobald, Gavin Lear, Jessica A. Wallbank, Stefan D. M. Maday, Olga Pantos, Victor Gambarini, François Audrézet, Olga Pantos, Gavin Lear, Olga Pantos, Stefan D. M. Maday, Stefan D. M. Maday, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Gavin Lear, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Olga Pantos, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Louise Weaver Victor Gambarini, Louise Weaver Gavin Lear, Lloyd Donaldson, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Olga Pantos, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Dawn A. Smith, Dawn A. Smith, Dawn A. Smith, Dawn A. Smith, Dawn A. Smith, Olga Pantos, Louise Weaver Victor Gambarini, Louise Weaver Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Louise Weaver Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Jessica A. Wallbank, Fraser Doake, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Stefan D. M. Maday, Jessica A. Wallbank, Gavin Lear, Olga Pantos, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Dawn A. Smith, Fraser Doake, Jessica A. Wallbank, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Fraser Doake, Gavin Lear, Dawn A. Smith, Olga Pantos, Fraser Doake, François Audrézet, Louise Weaver Louise Weaver Louise Weaver François Audrézet, Olga Pantos, Gavin Lear, Stefan D. M. Maday, Jessica A. Wallbank, Gavin Lear, Olga Pantos, Victor Gambarini, François Audrézet, Lloyd Donaldson, Dawn A. Smith, Beatrix Theobald, Beatrix Theobald, Beatrix Theobald, Maxime Barbier, Olga Pantos, Dawn A. Smith, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Olga Pantos, Gavin Lear, Gavin Lear, François Audrézet, François Audrézet, Stefan D. M. Maday, Jessica A. Wallbank, Maxime Barbier, Olga Pantos, Louise Weaver Louise Weaver

Summary

Researchers tracked prokaryotic and fungal biofilm succession on polyethylene, nylon, and glass panels immersed in a New Zealand harbor for 2, 6, and 12 weeks, finding that microbial communities differed significantly from surrounding seawater regardless of substrate type. No substrate-specific communities were identified, suggesting microorganisms colonize plastics as attachment surfaces rather than for direct metabolic benefit from the plastic polymer.

Study Type Environmental

The ubiquity of plastic debris in marine environments raises the question, what impacts do plastics have on our marine microbiota? To investigate this, we applied bacterial 16S rRNA gene and fungal ITS2 region sequencing to identify changes in microbial biofilm community compositions on marine plastic, over time. We sampled biofilm on virgin linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE), nylon-6 (PA) and glass after 2, 6 and 12 weeks of constant immersion in Te Whakaraupō-Lyttelton Harbour, Aotearoa-New Zealand. Of the prokaryotes, Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes were predominant in all samples and Verrucomicrobiota were most abundant in mature biofilms. Microbial communities on the three substrate types were significantly distinct from those in the surrounding seawater, regardless of age, but not between attachment substrates. Bacterial communities occurring two weeks after immersion and fungal communities at six weeks were found to vary more among substrate types than at other times; however, no significant substrate-specific communities were identified overall. Taxa closely related to previously reported plastic-biodegrading species were found in very low abundance across all substrates, including on the glass slides. Our findings suggest that microorganisms do not selectively persist on the LLDPE or PA surfaces to gain significant direct metabolic benefit, instead using these plastics primarily as an attachment surface on which they form generalist biofilm communities.

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