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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. Detection Methods Gut & Microbiome Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Microbial carrying capacity and carbon biomass of plastic marine debris

The ISME Journal 2020 97 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Shiye Zhao, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Shiye Zhao, Erik Zettler, Shiye Zhao, Erik Zettler, Shiye Zhao, Shiye Zhao, Tracy J. Mincer, Shiye Zhao, Tracy J. Mincer, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Tracy J. Mincer, Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Erik Zettler, Erik Zettler, Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Erik Zettler, Tracy J. Mincer, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Tracy J. Mincer, Erik Zettler, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Shiye Zhao, Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Tracy J. Mincer, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler Tracy J. Mincer, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Shiye Zhao, Linda Amaral‐Zettler Linda Amaral‐Zettler

Summary

Researchers estimated the microbial carrying capacity and carbon biomass of floating marine plastic debris, finding that the collective surface area of ocean plastic supports a substantial microbial community whose carbon biomass, while modest relative to total ocean microbial carbon, represents a novel and persistent ecological niche with potential biogeochemical significance.

Study Type Environmental

Trillions of plastic debris fragments are floating at sea, presenting a substantial surface area for microbial colonization. Numerous cultivation-independent surveys have characterized plastic-associated microbial biofilms, however, quantitative studies addressing microbial carbon biomass are lacking. Our confocal laser scanning microscopy data show that early biofilm development on polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene, and glass substrates displayed variable cell size, abundance, and carbon biomass, whereas these parameters stabilized in mature biofilms. Unexpectedly, plastic substrates presented lower volume proportions of photosynthetic cells after 8 weeks, compared to glass. Early biofilms displayed the highest proportions of diatoms, which could influence the vertical transport of plastic debris. In total, conservative estimates suggest 2.1 × 10<sup>21</sup> to 3.4 × 10<sup>21</sup> cells, corresponding to about 1% of the microbial cells in the ocean surface microlayer (1.5 × 10<sup>3</sup> to 1.1 × 10<sup>4</sup> tons of carbon biomass), inhabit plastic debris globally. As an unnatural addition to sea surface waters, the large quantity of cells and biomass carried by plastic debris has the potential to impact biodiversity, autochthonous ecological functions, and biogeochemical cycles within the ocean.

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