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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 Sign in to save

Polystyrene microplastics increase microbial release of marine Chromophoric Dissolved Organic Matter in microcosm experiments

Scientific Reports 2018 94 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.
Luisa Galgani, Anja Engel, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Anja Engel, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Steven Loiselle Luisa Galgani, Anja Engel, Anja Engel, Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Anja Engel, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Claudio Rossi, Anja Engel, Anja Engel, Steven Loiselle Anja Engel, Luisa Galgani, Alessandro Donati, Alessandro Donati, Luisa Galgani, Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Anja Engel, Anja Engel, Luisa Galgani, Anja Engel, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Luisa Galgani, Steven Loiselle Anja Engel, Anja Engel, Anja Engel, Steven Loiselle Anja Engel, Anja Engel, Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle Luisa Galgani, Steven Loiselle Steven Loiselle

Summary

Researchers found that polystyrene microplastics increased microbial release of chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) in marine microcosm experiments, suggesting that microplastics can alter microbial community dynamics and influence the optical properties and carbon cycling of marine waters.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

About 5 trillion plastic particles are present in our oceans, from the macro to the micro size. Like any other aquatic particulate, plastics and microplastics can create a micro-environment, within which microbial and chemical conditions differ significantly from the surrounding water. Despite the high and increasing abundance of microplastics in the ocean, their influence on the transformation and composition of marine organic matter is largely unknown. Chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) is the photo-reactive fraction of the marine dissolved organic matter (DOM) pool. Changes in CDOM quality and quantity have impacts on marine microbial dynamics and the underwater light environment. One major source of CDOM is produced by marine bacteria through their alteration of pre-existing DOM substrates. In a series of microcosm experiments in controlled marine conditions, we explored the impact of microplastics on the quality and quantity of microbial CDOM. In the presence of microplastics we observed an increased production of CDOM with changes in its molecular weight, which resulted from either an increased microbial CDOM production or an enhanced transformation of DOM from lower to higher molecular weight CDOM. Our results point to the possibility that marine microplastics act as localized hot spots for microbial activity, with the potential to influence marine carbon dynamics.

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