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Microplastics: New substrates for heterotrophic activity contribute to altering organic matter cycles in aquatic ecosystems

The Science of The Total Environment 2018 193 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
María Arias-Andrés, María Arias-Andrés, María Arias-Andrés, María Arias-Andrés, María Arias-Andrés, Hans‐Peter Grossart Marie Therese Kettner, Marie Therese Kettner, Marie Therese Kettner, Hans‐Peter Grossart María Arias-Andrés, Marie Therese Kettner, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart María Arias-Andrés, Takeshi Miki, Takeshi Miki, Takeshi Miki, Marie Therese Kettner, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart María Arias-Andrés, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart María Arias-Andrés, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart María Arias-Andrés, María Arias-Andrés, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart

Summary

This study demonstrated that heterotrophic bacteria colonizing microplastic surfaces in aquatic ecosystems have distinct metabolic capabilities and can process organic matter at rates different from planktonic bacteria. The findings suggest that the plastisphere — the microbial community on plastic surfaces — may alter organic matter cycling in aquatic environments as microplastic abundance grows.

Heterotrophic microbes with the capability to process considerable amounts of organic matter can colonize microplastic particles (MP) in aquatic ecosystems. Weather colonization of microorganisms on MP will alter ecological niche and functioning of microbial communities remains still unanswered. Therefore, we compared the functional diversity of biofilms on microplastics when incubated in three lakes in northeastern Germany differing in trophy and limnological features. For all lakes, we compared heterotrophic activities of MP biofilms with those of microorganisms in the surrounding water by using Biolog® EcoPlates and assessed their oxygen consumption in microcosm assays with and without MP. The present study found that the total biofilm biomass was higher in the oligo-mesotrophic and dystrophic lakes than in the eutrophic lake. In all lakes, functional diversity profiles of MP biofilms consistently differed from those in the surrounding water. However, solely in the oligo-mesotrophic lake MP biofilms had a higher functional richness compared to the ambient water. These results demonstrate that the functionality and hence the ecological role of MP-associated microbial communities are context-dependent, i.e. different environments lead to substantial changes in biomass build up and heterotrophic activities of MP biofilms. We propose that MP surfaces act as new niches for aquatic microorganisms and that the constantly increasing MP pollution has the potential to globally impact carbon dynamics of pelagic environments by altering heterotrophic activities.

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