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This study from 2013 was a revelation about how plastic is colonized and metabolized (!) in the ocean:

"Life in the “Plastisphere”: Microbial Communities on Plastic Marine Debris"

Full PDF: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/branco2014/files/2014/...

First part of abstract:

Plastics are the most abundant form of marine debris, with global production rising and documented impacts in some marine environments, but the influence of plastic on open ocean ecosystems is poorly understood, particularly for microbial communities. Plastic marine debris (PMD) collected at multiple locations in the North Atlantic was analyzed with scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and next-generation sequencing to characterize the attached microbial communities. We unveiled a diverse microbial community of heterotrophs, autotrophs, predators, and symbionts, a community we refer to as the “Plastisphere”. Pits visualized in the PMD surface conformed to bacterial shapes suggesting active hydrolysis of the hydrocarbon polymer. Small-subunit rRNA gene surveys identified several hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria, supporting the possibility that microbes play a role in degrading PMD. ...

The pictures are striking. It really looks like the plastic is being eaten. The 2013 study only covered floating debris, though. High density plastics that sink to the benthic zone arrive in an environment with much slower biological turnover and different organisms than the near-surface environment. This current study is interesting in that it sampled enzymes from different ocean depths, not just the surface, and found elevated degradation signals even at depth.



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