0
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 Remediation Sign in to save

Deep-sea anthropogenic macrodebris harbours rich and diverse communities of bacteria and archaea

PLoS ONE 2018 53 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lucy C. Woodall Lucy C. Woodall Lucy C. Woodall Claire Gwinnett, Lucy C. Woodall Claire Gwinnett, Claire Gwinnett, Claire Gwinnett, Lucy C. Woodall Claire Gwinnett, Anna D. Jungblut, Claire Gwinnett, Claire Gwinnett, Claire Gwinnett, Claire Gwinnett, Claire Gwinnett, Anna D. Jungblut, Lucy C. Woodall Laura F. Robinson, Laura F. Robinson, Claire Gwinnett, Lucy C. Woodall Kevin Hopkins, Claire Gwinnett, Gordon Paterson, Claire Gwinnett, Claire Gwinnett, Andie Hall, Lucy C. Woodall Claire Gwinnett, Claire Gwinnett, Laura F. Robinson, Claire Gwinnett, Laura F. Robinson, Gordon Paterson, Gordon Paterson, Claire Gwinnett, Claire Gwinnett, Gordon Paterson, Lucy C. Woodall Lucy C. Woodall Claire Gwinnett, Lucy C. Woodall Lucy C. Woodall Lucy C. Woodall Lucy C. Woodall Lucy C. Woodall Lucy C. Woodall

Summary

Diverse communities of bacteria and archaea were found living on anthropogenic debris (including plastics) in the deep sea, suggesting that human waste is creating new microbial habitats in the ocean's most remote regions. These plastic-associated microbial communities may spread non-native organisms to new deep-sea locations.

The deep sea is the largest biome on earth, and microbes dominate in biomass and abundance. Anthropogenic litter is now almost ubiquitous in this biome, and its deposition creates new habitats and environments, including for microbial assemblages. With the ever increasing accumulation of this debris, it is timely to identify and describe the bacterial and archaeal communities that are able to form biofilms on macrodebris in the deep sea. Using 16S rRNA gene high throughput sequencing, we show for the first time the composition of bacteria and archaea on macrodebris collected from the deep sea. Our data suggest differences in the microbial assemblage composition across litter of different materials including metal, rubber, glass, fabric and plastic. These results imply that anthropogenic macrodebris provide diverse habitats for bacterial and archaeal biofilms and each may harbour distinct microbial communities.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper