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Rapid bacterial colonization of low-density polyethylene microplastics in coastal sediment microcosms

BMC Microbiology 2014 530 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.
Jesse P. Harrison, Jesse P. Harrison, Jesse P. Harrison, Jesse P. Harrison, A. Mark Osborn, Jesse P. Harrison, Jesse P. Harrison, Michaela Schratzberger Jesse P. Harrison, Melanie Sapp, Melanie Sapp, Melanie Sapp, A. Mark Osborn, Melanie Sapp, Melanie Sapp, Jesse P. Harrison, Michaela Schratzberger Jesse P. Harrison, Jesse P. Harrison, Melanie Sapp, A. Mark Osborn, A. Mark Osborn, A. Mark Osborn, Jesse P. Harrison, Melanie Sapp, Michaela Schratzberger

Summary

Researchers studied how quickly bacteria colonize low-density polyethylene microplastics in coastal marine sediments, finding rapid colonization within days and progressive development of complex biofilm communities. The study highlights that plastic particles in coastal sediments quickly become biologically active surfaces that may influence their fate and ecological interactions.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

BACKGROUND: Synthetic microplastics (≤5-mm fragments) are emerging environmental contaminants that have been found to accumulate within coastal marine sediments worldwide. The ecological impacts and fate of microplastic debris are only beginning to be revealed, with previous research into these topics having primarily focused on higher organisms and/or pelagic environments. Despite recent research into plastic-associated microorganisms in seawater, the microbial colonization of microplastics in benthic habitats has not been studied. Therefore, we employed a 14-day microcosm experiment to investigate bacterial colonization of low-density polyethylene (LDPE) microplastics within three types of coastal marine sediment from Spurn Point, Humber Estuary, U.K. RESULTS: Bacterial attachment onto LDPE within sediments was demonstrated by scanning electron microscopy and catalyzed reporter deposition fluorescence in situ hybridisation (CARD-FISH). Log-fold increases in the abundance of 16S rRNA genes from LDPE-associated bacteria occurred within 7 days with 16S rRNA gene numbers on LDPE surfaces differing significantly across sediment types, as shown by quantitative PCR. Terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis demonstrated rapid selection of LDPE-associated bacterial assemblages whose structure and composition differed significantly from those in surrounding sediments. Additionally, T-RFLP analysis revealed successional convergence of the LDPE-associated communities from the different sediments over the 14-day experiment. Sequencing of cloned 16S rRNA genes demonstrated that these communities were dominated after 14 days by the genera Arcobacter and Colwellia (totalling 84-93% of sequences). Attachment by Colwellia spp. onto LDPE within sediments was confirmed by CARD-FISH. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that bacteria within coastal marine sediments can rapidly colonize LDPE microplastics, with evidence for the successional formation of plastisphere-specific bacterial assemblages. Although the taxonomic compositions of these assemblages are likely to differ between marine sediments and the water column, both Arcobacter and Colwellia spp. have previously been affiliated with the degradation of hydrocarbon contaminants within low-temperature marine environments. Since hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria have also been discovered on plastic fragments in seawater, our data suggest that recruitment of hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria on microplastics is likely to represent a shared feature between both benthic and pelagic marine habitats.

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