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Cell size matters: nano- and micro-plastics preferentially drive declines of large marine phytoplankton due to co-aggregation

2021 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Craig J. Dedman, Craig J. Dedman, Craig J. Dedman, Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Víctor Fernández‐Juárez, Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Pedro Echeveste, Pedro Echeveste, Pedro Echeveste, Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Pedro Echeveste, Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Pedro Echeveste, Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza Joseph A. Christie‐Oleza

Summary

Nano- and microplastics aggregated preferentially with large marine phytoplankton, causing them to sink faster and reducing their abundance relative to small cells. This selective removal could disrupt marine food webs and reduce the ocean's ability to absorb carbon.

Polymers

Abstract Marine plastic pollution represents a key environmental concern. Whilst ecotoxicological data for plastic is increasingly available, its impact upon marine phytoplankton remains unclear. Owing to their predicted abundance in the marine environment and likely interactions with phytoplankton, here we focus on the smaller fraction of plastic particles (∼50 nm and ∼2 µm polystyrene spheres). Exposure of natural phytoplankton communities and laboratory cultures revealed that plastic exposure does not follow traditional trends in ecotoxicological research, since large phytoplankton appear particularly susceptible towards plastics exposure despite their higher surface-to-volume ratios. Cell declines appear driven by hetero-aggregation and co-sedimentation of cells with plastic particles, recorded visually and demonstrated using confocal microscopy. As a consequence, plastic exposure also caused disruption to photosynthetic functioning, as determined by both photosynthetic efficiency and high throughput proteomics. Negative effects upon phytoplankton are recorded at concentrations orders of magnitude above those estimated in the environment. Hence, it is likely that impacts of NPs and MPs are exacerbated at the high concentrations typically used in ecotoxicological research ( i . e ., mg L -1 ).

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