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Bioplastic biodegradability shapes microbial communities in a coastal brackish environment

Microplastics and Nanoplastics 2025
Igor Stelmach Pessi, Eeva Eronen‐Rasimus, Pinja Näkki, David N. Thomas, Hermanni Kaartokallio

Summary

Researchers conducted multi-season field and lab experiments in the Baltic Sea to test biodegradation of six bioplastics, finding that cellulose acetate, polybutylene succinate, and polyhydroxybutyrate developed distinct microbial communities capable of degrading multiple bioplastic types, while coining the term "bioplastisphere" for these unique plastic-associated microbial ecosystems.

Polymers
Study Type In vitro

Abstract Microorganisms are metabolically versatile and central to marine ecosystems, yet the potential of marine microbial communities to degrade different bioplastics and the effect of environmental factors are poorly understood. Employing multi-seasonal in situ and in vitro experiments, we assessed the biodegradation of six commonly used bio-based bioplastic materials at a coastal site in the brackish Baltic Sea and characterised the associated microbial communities using metagenomics and metatranscriptomics. Cellulose acetate (CA), polybutylene succinate (PBS), and polyhydroxybutyrate/valerate (PHB) degraded at varying rates across materials, seasons, and experimental settings, with up to 28% weight attrition after 97 weeks in situ (CA) and 56% carbon loss to CO 2 after four weeks in vitro (PBS). The three biodegraded plastics developed similar microbial communities that differed markedly from those on the other materials (cellulose acetate propionate, polyamide, and polyethylene) and in the water column. The main microbial populations on the biodegraded plastics included aerobic and facultative anaerobic heterotrophs with a broad capacity for carbohydrate metabolism. Populations with the potential for nitrogen fixation and denitrification were more prevalent on the biodegraded plastics, suggesting a link with the marine nitrogen cycle. Based on the metatranscriptomic signal of key genes involved in the initial hydrolysis of CA, PBS, and PHB, we identified diverse microbial populations that can potentially drive the biodegradation of these materials in the Baltic Sea, many of which encoded the potential to degrade multiple bioplastics. We propose the term bioplastisphere to denote the distinctive microbial communities associated with biodegradable plastics.

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