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Typhoon-induced turbulence redistributed microplastics in coastal areas and reformed plastisphere community

Water Research 2021 99 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Pengfei Wu, Xinyi Chang, Siqing Wang, Siqing Wang, Liming Chen, Liming Chen, Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Xinyi Chang, Xiao Lu, Xinyi Chang, Xinyi Chang, Xinyi Chang, Xinyi Chang, Xiao Lu, Xinyi Chang, Yu Xia, Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Yuanyuan Tang Jiangpeng Li, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yu Xia, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Yuanyuan Tang Jiangpeng Li, Xuyang Zhang, Xuyang Zhang, Pengfei Wu, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yu Xia, Xiao Lu, Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Jiangpeng Li, Jiangpeng Li, Jiangpeng Li, Liming Chen, Siqing Wang, Siqing Wang, Pengfei Wu, Yuanyuan Tang Xiao Lu, Liming Chen, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Xinyi Chang, Xiao Lu, Yu Xia, Xiao Lu, Pengfei Wu, Yuanyuan Tang Zhanwen Cheng, Pengfei Wu, Yuanyuan Tang Jiangpeng Li, Zhanwen Cheng, Yuanyuan Tang Jiangpeng Li, Yuanyuan Tang Xuyang Zhang, Xuyang Zhang, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Pengfei Wu, Pengfei Wu, Yuanyuan Tang Xiao Lu, Pengfei Wu, Jiangpeng Li, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Xinyi Chang, Xinyi Chang, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yu Xia, Yu Xia, Yuanyuan Tang

Summary

Researchers studied how Typhoon Wipha affected microplastic distribution and the microbial communities living on plastic surfaces in coastal waters near Shenzhen, China. They found that the typhoon significantly increased microplastic abundance in surface water while decreasing it in sediment, suggesting storm turbulence resuspends settled particles. The typhoon also reshaped the plastisphere microbial community, indicating that extreme weather events can redistribute both microplastics and their associated organisms.

Study Type Environmental

The increasing microplastic pollution together with the plastisphere-associated ecological threats in coastal areas have aroused global concern. Tropical cyclones have been increased in both frequency and intensity under global warming, causing intense impact on the microplastics distribution and the structure of coastal ecosystems. However, until most currently, the extent to which typhoon impacts the microplastics and plastisphere community remains poorly known. This study analyzed the effects of Typhoon Wipha (Code: 1907) on microplastics abundance and composition in surface water and sediment crossed coastal areas of Shenzhen. Here we found a significant typhoon-induced increase in microplastics abundance in surface water, whereas an opposite trend was observed in sediment. Despite the evident transportation of microplastics from sediment to surface water by agitation, a possible microplastics influx was introduced by typhoon as evidenced by the large attribution of unknown force in source tracking analysis. Furthermore, typhoon had adeptly uniformed the plastisphere community in the sediment along the 190 km costal line overnight. A significant increase of nitrogen fixer, Bradyrhizobiaceae, was observed ubiquitously after typhoon, which might alter the nitrogen cycling and increase eutrophic condition of the coastal ecological system. Together, this study expanded the knowledge about the impact of typhoon-induced influx of the microplastics on coastal biogeochemical cycling. Moreover, the microplastics and the plastisphere compositional pattern revealed here will underpin future studies on adsorption behavior, interfacial processes and ecotoxicity of the coastal microplastic pollution.

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