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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Gut & Microbiome Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Biofouling impacts on polyethylene density and sinking in coastal waters: A macro/micro tipping point?

Water Research 2021 175 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.
Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Scott M. Gallager, Scott M. Gallager, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Scott M. Gallager, Erik Zettler, Scott M. Gallager, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Erik Zettler, Scott M. Gallager, Scott M. Gallager, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Michiel A. Klaassen, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Scott M. Gallager, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Tracy J. Mincer, Scott M. Gallager, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Scott M. Gallager, Scott M. Gallager, Scott M. Gallager, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Tracy J. Mincer, Scott M. Gallager, Tracy J. Mincer, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler

Summary

Researchers measured biofouling-induced density changes in polyethylene microplastic particles deployed in coastal waters and found that biofouling caused buoyant particles to sink on timescales of days to weeks, challenging assumptions about surface plastic persistence and potentially explaining the missing plastic paradox.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Biofouling causing an increase in plastic density and sinking is one of the hypotheses to account for the unexpectedly low amount of buoyant plastic debris encountered at the ocean surface. Field surveys show that polyethylene and polypropylene, the two most abundant buoyant plastics, both occur below the surface and in sediments, and experimental studies confirm that biofouling can cause both of these plastics to sink. However, studies quantifying the actual density of fouled plastics are rare, despite the fact that density will determine the transport and eventual fate of plastic in the ocean. Here we investigated the role of microbial biofilms in sinking of polyethylene microplastic and quantified the density changes natural biofouling communities cause in the coastal waters of the North Sea. Molecular data confirmed the variety of bacteria and eukaryotes (including animals and other multicellular organisms) colonizing the plastic over time. Fouling communities increased the density of plastic and caused sinking, and the plastic remained negatively buoyant even during the winter with lower growth rates. Relative surface area alone, however, did not predict whether a plastic piece sank. Due to patchy colonization, fragmentation of sinking pieces may result in smaller pieces regaining buoyancy and returning to the surface. Our results suggest that primarily multicellular organisms cause sinking of plastic pieces with surface area to volume ratios (SA:V) below 100 (generally pieces above a couple hundred micrometers in size), and that this is a "tipping point" at which microbial biofilms become the key players causing sinking of smaller pieces with higher SA:V ratios, including most fibers that are too small for larger (multicellular) organisms to colonize.

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