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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. Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Effect of microplastics on ecosystem functioning: Microbial nitrogen removal mediated by benthic invertebrates

The Science of The Total Environment 2020 139 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.
Yuyue Huang, Yuyue Huang, Fang Wang Fang Wang Dunmei Lin, Khara Grieger, Wei Yang, Wei Yang, Wei Yang, Yuyue Huang, Fang Wang Wei Li, Fang Wang Yuyue Huang, Wei Li, Fang Wang Fang Wang Wei Li, Wei Li, Khara Grieger, Jie Gao, Fang Wang Wei Yang, Fang Wang Yuyue Huang, Yuyue Huang, Yuyue Huang, Yuyue Huang, Wei Li, Yuyue Huang, Wei Yang, Wei Li, Yue Zhi, Yue Zhi, Le Han, Wei Li, Wei Li, Dunmei Lin, Bolin Min, Bolin Min, Yue Zhi, Fang Wang Khara Grieger, Jingmei Yao, Fang Wang Fang Wang

Summary

Researchers investigated how polyethylene microplastics affect nitrogen removal in freshwater sediments where chironomid larvae and microorganisms coexist. They found that while microplastics and larvae each individually promoted nitrogen removal by boosting denitrifying bacteria, combining them together produced less benefit than expected. The study suggests that rising microplastic concentrations may disrupt the natural nitrogen cycling that benthic invertebrates help maintain in freshwater ecosystems.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

While ecotoxicological impacts of microplastics on aquatic organisms have started to be investigated recently, impacts on ecosystem functions mediated by benthic biota remain largely unknown. We investigated the effect of microplastics on nitrogen removal in freshwater sediments where microorganisms and benthic invertebrates (i.e., chironomid larvae) co-existed. Using microcosm experiments, sediments with and without invertebrate chironomid larvae were exposed to microplastics (polyethylene) at concentrations of 0, 0.1, and 1 wt%. After 28 days of exposure, the addition of microplastics or chironomid larvae promoted the growth of denitrifying and anammox bacteria, leading to increased total nitrogen removal, in both cases. However, in microcosms with chironomid larvae and microplastics co-existing, nitrogen removal was less than the sum of their individual effects, especially at microplastics concentration of 1 wt%, indicating an adverse effect on microbial nitrogen removal mediated by macroinvertebrates. This study reveals that the increasing concentration of microplastics entangled the nitrogen cycling mediated by benthic invertebrates in freshwater ecosystems. These findings highlight the pursuit of a comprehensive understanding of the impacts of microplastics on the functioning in freshwater ecosystems.

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