Microbe-mineral interactions in the Plastisphere: Coastal biogeochemistry and consequences for degradation of plastics

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Microbe-mineral interactions in the Plastisphere : Coastal biogeochemistry and consequences for degradation of plastics. / Dodhia, Maya S.; Rogers, Kelsey L.; Fernández-juárez, Victor; Carreres-Calabuig, Joan A.; Löscher, Carolin R.; Tisserand, Amandine A.; Keulen, Nynke; Riemann, Lasse; Shashoua, Yvonne; Posth, Nicole R.

I: Frontiers in Marine Science, Bind 10, 1134815, 2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Dodhia, MS, Rogers, KL, Fernández-juárez, V, Carreres-Calabuig, JA, Löscher, CR, Tisserand, AA, Keulen, N, Riemann, L, Shashoua, Y & Posth, NR 2023, 'Microbe-mineral interactions in the Plastisphere: Coastal biogeochemistry and consequences for degradation of plastics', Frontiers in Marine Science, bind 10, 1134815. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2023.1134815

APA

Dodhia, M. S., Rogers, K. L., Fernández-juárez, V., Carreres-Calabuig, J. A., Löscher, C. R., Tisserand, A. A., Keulen, N., Riemann, L., Shashoua, Y., & Posth, N. R. (2023). Microbe-mineral interactions in the Plastisphere: Coastal biogeochemistry and consequences for degradation of plastics. Frontiers in Marine Science, 10, [1134815]. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2023.1134815

Vancouver

Dodhia MS, Rogers KL, Fernández-juárez V, Carreres-Calabuig JA, Löscher CR, Tisserand AA o.a. Microbe-mineral interactions in the Plastisphere: Coastal biogeochemistry and consequences for degradation of plastics. Frontiers in Marine Science. 2023;10. 1134815. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2023.1134815

Author

Dodhia, Maya S. ; Rogers, Kelsey L. ; Fernández-juárez, Victor ; Carreres-Calabuig, Joan A. ; Löscher, Carolin R. ; Tisserand, Amandine A. ; Keulen, Nynke ; Riemann, Lasse ; Shashoua, Yvonne ; Posth, Nicole R. / Microbe-mineral interactions in the Plastisphere : Coastal biogeochemistry and consequences for degradation of plastics. I: Frontiers in Marine Science. 2023 ; Bind 10.

Bibtex

@article{cf9dd8b25ac54339b839f7f762948f74,
title = "Microbe-mineral interactions in the Plastisphere: Coastal biogeochemistry and consequences for degradation of plastics",
abstract = "Microbe-mineral interactions, such as mineral substrate utilization and aggregate formation, have played a key role in the cycling of elements through Earth evolution. In water, soils, and sediment biogeochemistry modulates microbial community composition and mineral formation over spatial and temporal scales. Plastic is a new material that is now widespread in the environment. Both microbial and mineral associations with plastic comprise the Plastisphere, which influences the fate of plastic. This study focuses on how the biogeochemical environment defines microbial and mineral association with polyethylene (PE) and polystyrene (PS) over a 12-month period in a temperate coastal harbor. The coastal harbor environment was separated into 3 conceptual compartments defined by physical and biogeochemical conditions, that allow transfer of electrons between species e.g., light penetration and redox setting. Microbe and mineral association were investigated in the water column, top sediment, and bottom sediment by applying a range of modern analytical techniques to identify changes in the chemical structures of plastics, microbial community development, metal, salt and mineral formation. The epiplastic microbial community was distinct to that of the surrounding environment across changing redox conditions. The type and oxidation state of metallic minerals formed on plastics or entrapped in the biofilm matrix related to the dominant abiotic and biotic processes across redox conditions. FTIR spectroscopy indicated the occurrence of PE and PS oxidation in the various biogeochemical environments. Combined, these findings demonstrate that redox conditions and surrounding biogeochemistry mediate the composition of mineralogical and biological loading of PE and PS in coastal marine environments. This suggests that the biogeochemical setting in which the plastics are stored constrains the development of plastic interfacial biogeochemistry and the potential for plastic degradation and transport over time.",
author = "Dodhia, {Maya S.} and Rogers, {Kelsey L.} and Victor Fern{\'a}ndez-ju{\'a}rez and Carreres-Calabuig, {Joan A.} and L{\"o}scher, {Carolin R.} and Tisserand, {Amandine A.} and Nynke Keulen and Lasse Riemann and Yvonne Shashoua and Posth, {Nicole R.}",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.3389/fmars.2023.1134815",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "Frontiers in Marine Science",
issn = "2296-7745",
publisher = "Frontiers Media",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Microbe-mineral interactions in the Plastisphere

T2 - Coastal biogeochemistry and consequences for degradation of plastics

AU - Dodhia, Maya S.

AU - Rogers, Kelsey L.

AU - Fernández-juárez, Victor

AU - Carreres-Calabuig, Joan A.

AU - Löscher, Carolin R.

AU - Tisserand, Amandine A.

AU - Keulen, Nynke

AU - Riemann, Lasse

AU - Shashoua, Yvonne

AU - Posth, Nicole R.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Microbe-mineral interactions, such as mineral substrate utilization and aggregate formation, have played a key role in the cycling of elements through Earth evolution. In water, soils, and sediment biogeochemistry modulates microbial community composition and mineral formation over spatial and temporal scales. Plastic is a new material that is now widespread in the environment. Both microbial and mineral associations with plastic comprise the Plastisphere, which influences the fate of plastic. This study focuses on how the biogeochemical environment defines microbial and mineral association with polyethylene (PE) and polystyrene (PS) over a 12-month period in a temperate coastal harbor. The coastal harbor environment was separated into 3 conceptual compartments defined by physical and biogeochemical conditions, that allow transfer of electrons between species e.g., light penetration and redox setting. Microbe and mineral association were investigated in the water column, top sediment, and bottom sediment by applying a range of modern analytical techniques to identify changes in the chemical structures of plastics, microbial community development, metal, salt and mineral formation. The epiplastic microbial community was distinct to that of the surrounding environment across changing redox conditions. The type and oxidation state of metallic minerals formed on plastics or entrapped in the biofilm matrix related to the dominant abiotic and biotic processes across redox conditions. FTIR spectroscopy indicated the occurrence of PE and PS oxidation in the various biogeochemical environments. Combined, these findings demonstrate that redox conditions and surrounding biogeochemistry mediate the composition of mineralogical and biological loading of PE and PS in coastal marine environments. This suggests that the biogeochemical setting in which the plastics are stored constrains the development of plastic interfacial biogeochemistry and the potential for plastic degradation and transport over time.

AB - Microbe-mineral interactions, such as mineral substrate utilization and aggregate formation, have played a key role in the cycling of elements through Earth evolution. In water, soils, and sediment biogeochemistry modulates microbial community composition and mineral formation over spatial and temporal scales. Plastic is a new material that is now widespread in the environment. Both microbial and mineral associations with plastic comprise the Plastisphere, which influences the fate of plastic. This study focuses on how the biogeochemical environment defines microbial and mineral association with polyethylene (PE) and polystyrene (PS) over a 12-month period in a temperate coastal harbor. The coastal harbor environment was separated into 3 conceptual compartments defined by physical and biogeochemical conditions, that allow transfer of electrons between species e.g., light penetration and redox setting. Microbe and mineral association were investigated in the water column, top sediment, and bottom sediment by applying a range of modern analytical techniques to identify changes in the chemical structures of plastics, microbial community development, metal, salt and mineral formation. The epiplastic microbial community was distinct to that of the surrounding environment across changing redox conditions. The type and oxidation state of metallic minerals formed on plastics or entrapped in the biofilm matrix related to the dominant abiotic and biotic processes across redox conditions. FTIR spectroscopy indicated the occurrence of PE and PS oxidation in the various biogeochemical environments. Combined, these findings demonstrate that redox conditions and surrounding biogeochemistry mediate the composition of mineralogical and biological loading of PE and PS in coastal marine environments. This suggests that the biogeochemical setting in which the plastics are stored constrains the development of plastic interfacial biogeochemistry and the potential for plastic degradation and transport over time.

U2 - 10.3389/fmars.2023.1134815

DO - 10.3389/fmars.2023.1134815

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

JO - Frontiers in Marine Science

JF - Frontiers in Marine Science

SN - 2296-7745

M1 - 1134815

ER -

ID: 340109032