Kai Ziervogel , Sierra Kehoe , Astrid Zapata De Jesus , Alireza Saidi-Mehrabad , Miriam Robertson , Ariana Patterson , Aron Stubbins
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The fate of microplastics (MPs) in the ocean is mostly driven by (i) photo-oxidation to smaller particles and dissolved constituents, which fuel the dissolved organic carbon pool (plastic-derived DOC, pDOC), and (ii) interactions with organic matter forming sinking aggregates (marine plastic snow). Two separate laboratory experiments were conducted to investigate the two pathways of MPs. In the first experiment, we measured potential rates of microbial pDOC utilization in bottle incubations over 15 days with microbial assemblages from coastal and offshore waters. Microbial utilization of pDOC was more efficient in the coastal (72% bioreactive pDOC) compared with the offshore experiment (32% bioreactive pDOC) 15 days. Changes in bacterial cell abundance and extracellular enzyme activities (glucosidase, peptidase, esterases) indicated that a fraction of pDOC was repackaged into microbial exopolymeric substances (EPS), stimulating growth of known EPS degrading bacteria within the phyla Verrucomicrobiota and Planctomycetota. Microbial EPS likely also played a key role in our second experiment that showed the formation of marine plastic snow in roller tanks with cultured cells of Emiliana huxleyi but not with cells of an Isocrysis sp. culture. Average sinking velocities of marine plastic snow were a factor of 1.2 lower compared with marine snow without MPs. Both aggregate types showed reduced sinking velocities in a density stratified sinking column. Our results from the two experiments on (i) microbial utilization of pDOC and (ii) the formation and sinking of marine plastic snow indicate potential effects of plastic-derived compounds on microbial elemental cycles (i.e., pDOC repackaged into EPS) with consequences for the efficiency of the biological carbon pump (i.e., marine plastic snow reduces carbon export) and the fate of plastic-derived compounds in the ocean.
期刊介绍:
Marine Chemistry is an international medium for the publication of original studies and occasional reviews in the field of chemistry in the marine environment, with emphasis on the dynamic approach. The journal endeavours to cover all aspects, from chemical processes to theoretical and experimental work, and, by providing a central channel of communication, to speed the flow of information in this relatively new and rapidly expanding discipline.