We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Aggregation in experimental studies with microparticles: Bacterial communities in the exposure system affect animal responses to the test particles
Summary
Researchers found that bacterial communities established by the test animals themselves in exposure vessels significantly influenced how aquatic organisms responded to microplastic particles in laboratory studies. The findings highlight a frequently overlooked confounding factor in ecotoxicological experiments with particulate materials.
Abstract The role of microorganisms is frequently overlooked in effect studies with particulate materials, such as microplastics. In addition to the microbes naturally found in the environment, test animals can transfer their microbiome to the surrounding media and establish bacterial communities in the exposure vessels. The interactions between the animals and the bacterial communities during the exposure can influence the animal responses to experimental factors, such as particle abundance, aggregation, and other characteristics. However, the current designs in particle ecotoxicology often overlook these interactions. In our 72-hour experiment, Daphnia magna were exposed to mixed kaolin clay and microplastics (<20-µm polystyrene fragments). We aimed to assess microbial communities derived from Daphnia microbiota, focusing on particle-associated biofilms and non-adherent cells and the effects of the total suspended solids (1-10 mg/l), microplastics contribution (0-10%), dissolved organic matter (agarose; 0 and 20 mg/l), and aggregate size/topology on these communities. Furthermore, we explored the impact of bacterial diversity and community composition on Daphnia mortality and body condition using individual protein content as a proxy. We found a high similarity between bacterial communities and the Daphnia microbiome, indicating the microbiome as the source. Experimental factors had differential effects on the biofilms and non-adherent cells, with total suspended solids and agarose mainly influencing non-adherent cells at the family level (mostly upregulation) and microplastics affecting biofilms (both up- and downregulation). Aggregate size and topology were the key predictors of bacterial alpha diversity and the abundance of the affected families. Finally, the adverse effects on Daphnia were primarily driven by small aggregate size, agarose addition, and high biofilm diversity. These findings underscore the need to consider microbial components and their interactions with particles and species to comprehensively understand microplastic effects and develop ecologically relevant hazard assessment assays.
Sign in to start a discussion.
More Papers Like This
Aggregation in experimental studies with microparticles: Experimental settings change particle size distribution during exposure
Researchers investigated how experimental conditions including exposure duration, particle concentration, organic carbon content, and test organism presence affect microplastic aggregation in ecotoxicological experiments, finding that particle size distribution changed substantially during experiments. Failure to account for aggregation during exposure leads to inconsistent and unreliable toxicity results across studies.
Microbiome Of Ecotoxicity Assays
This review examined how microorganisms in test systems affect the outcomes of ecotoxicology experiments, noting that bacteria can both increase and decrease the apparent toxicity of test substances including microplastics. Accounting for microbial interactions is important for accurately interpreting how microplastics harm aquatic and soil organisms in laboratory tests.
Interaction and transmission of daphnia microbiome to MP-containing aggregates
Researchers created environmentally realistic aquatic aggregates by combining natural particles with micro- and nanoplastics at varying ratios (0-10% MNP by mass) and total suspended solid concentrations (0.1-10 mg/L), then allowed Daphnia magna to interact with the aggregates for 72 hours before analyzing aggregate size and associated bacterial communities via 16S rRNA sequencing. The study investigated whether microplastic-containing aggregates select for distinct microbial communities, including potential pathogens, compared to natural particle aggregates.
Microplastics in freshwaters: Comparing effects of particle properties and an invertebrate consumer on microbial communities and ecosystem functions
Researchers tested how different microplastic properties, including concentration, shape, and polymer type, affect microbial communities and ecosystem functions in freshwater environments. They found that the presence of an invertebrate consumer had a stronger influence on microbial activity than the microplastics themselves, though high concentrations of certain particle shapes did alter community composition. The study suggests that the ecological effects of microplastics in freshwater depend heavily on the broader biological context.
Long-term exposure of a free-living freshwater micro- and meiobenthos community to microplastic mixtures in microcosms
Researchers exposed a natural freshwater micro- and meiobenthos community to microplastic mixtures in long-term microcosm experiments, finding community-level effects that differ from single-species studies and highlighting the importance of realistic multi-polymer exposure scenarios.