4.8 Article

Riverine microplastic and microbial community compositions: A field study in the Netherlands

期刊

WATER RESEARCH
卷 192, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2021.116852

关键词

Plastic; Biofilm; Pathogen; Antimicrobial resistance; Microbiome; Surface water

资金

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research (ZonMw)

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This study highlights the presence of microplastic pollution in a major riverine environment, impacting microbial communities and potential pathogens. High concentrations of microplastics, primarily polyamide and polyvinylchloride, were found. Different microbial compositions were observed on microplastics of varying sizes, with seasonality and methodological effects also playing a role.
Plastic pollution in aquatic environments, particularly microplastics (<5 mm), is an emerging health threat. The buoyancy, hydrophobic hard surfaces, novel polymer carbon sources and long-distance transport make microplastics a unique substrate for biofilms, potentially harbouring pathogens and enabling antimicrobial resistance (AMR) gene exchange. Microplastic concentrations, their polymer types and the associated microbial communities were determined in paired, contemporaneous samples from the Dutch portion of the river Rhine. Microplastics were collected through a cascade of 500/100/10 mu m sieves; filtrates and surface water were also analysed. Microplastics were characterized with infrared spectroscopy. Microbial communities and selected virulence and AMR genes were determined with 16S rRNA-sequencing and qPCR. Average microplastic concentration was 213,147 particles/m(3); polyamide and polyvinylchloride were the most abundant polymers. Microbial composition on 10 0-500 mu m samples differed significantly from surface water and 10-100 mu m or smaller samples, with lower microbial diversity compared to surface water. An increasingly 'water-like' microbial community was observed as particles became smaller. Associations amongst specific microbial taxa, polymer types and particle sizes, as well as seasonal and methodological effects, were also observed. Known biofilm-forming and plastic-degrading taxa (e.g. Pseudomonas) and taxa harbouring potential pathogens (Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Arcobacter) were enriched in certain sample types, and other risk-conferring signatures like the sul1 and erm(B) AMR genes were almost ubiquitous. Results were generally compatible with the existence of taxon-selecting mechanisms and reduced microbial diversity in the biofilms of plastic substrates, varying over seasons, polymer types and particle sizes. This study provided updated field data and insights on microplastic pollution in a major riverine environment. (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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