Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Municipal sewer systems have received increasing attention due to the magnitude of the microplastic stock and its potential ecological impacts. However, as a critical aspect of the adverse impacts, little is known about the plastisphere that forms in these engineered environments. Using high-throughput absolute quantification sequencing, we conducted a systemic study combining field survey and laboratory batch test to explain the general plastisphere pattern and the role of environmental and polymeric factors in driving plastisphere succession and assembly there. We demonstrated the capacity of microplastics to support high levels of microbial colonization, increasing by 8.7-56.0 and 1.26-5.62 times at field and laboratory scales, respectively, despite the less diverse communities hosted in the resulting plastisphere. Sediment communities exhibited higher diversity but greater loss of specific operational taxonomic units in their plastisphere than in the wastewater. The former plastisphere had primarily an enhanced methanogenesis-oriented metabolic network linked to hydrolysis fermentation, hydrogen-producing acetogenesis, and denitrification, while the latter had a pronounced niche partitioning and competitive interaction network. Exogenous substrate flux and composition were key in stimulating plastisphere community growth and succession. Furthermore, the high nitrogen baseline facilitated alternative niche formation for plastisphere nitrifiers and denitrifiers, and the plastisphere pathogens associated with denitrification and plastic biodegradation functions increased significantly. The aerobic state also promoted a 1.71 times higher colonizer load and a denser interaction pattern than the anaerobic state. Selective filtering by polymers was evident: polyethylene supported higher plastisphere diversity than polypropylene. This study provides new insights into the mechanisms driving colonizer loads and the adaptive succession and assembly of the plastisphere in such a typically hydrodynamic and highly contaminated environment. The results help to fill the knowledge gap in understanding the potential role of microplastics in shaping the microecology of sewers and increasing health risks and substrate loss during sewer transfer.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2023.123136DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

succession assembly
12
plastisphere
12
high-throughput absolute
8
absolute quantification
8
quantification sequencing
8
adaptive succession
8
municipal sewer
8
sewer systems
8
sequencing reveals
4
reveals adaptive
4

Similar Publications

Diversity and assembly mechanisms of zooplankton communities in freshwater aquaculture ponds.

Mar Life Sci Technol

August 2025

State Key Laboratory of Lake and Watershed Science for Water Security, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, 430072 China.

Unlabelled: Ecological succession is vital for forecasting ecosystem responses to environmental changes and their future states. Zooplankton, a primary natural food source in aquaculture, plays a crucial role in maintaining ecosystem function. Thus, understanding how zooplankton communities respond to environmental changes is essential for economic and ecological outcomes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ecological pattern of microalgal communities and associated risks in coastal ecosystems.

ISME Commun

January 2025

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR 999077, China.

Eukaryotic harmful and toxic microalgae, along with their derived toxins, pose significant threats to seafood safety, human health, and marine ecosystems. Here, we developed a novel full-length 18S rRNA database for harmful and toxic microalgae and combined metabarcoding with toxin analyses to investigate the ecological patterns of phytoplankton communities and the underlying mechanism of associated toxic microalgae risks. We identified 79 harmful and toxic species in Hong Kong's coastal waters, with dinoflagellates and diatoms representing the majority of toxic and harmful taxa, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent quest for emulating lifelike smart materials for developing functional outcomes has been spurred by the unparalleled spatiotemporal control of natural systems. However, it is still highly challenging to replicate the progressive time-dependent programmable features of biological systems, such as adaptive broad-spectrum luminescence accompanying functions. Here in, a chemically-fueled transient hydrogel is created based on an aggregation-induced emission-active peptide conjugate (NI-VD).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An altruistic rhizo-microbiome strategy in crop rotation systems for sustainable management of soil-borne diseases.

Plant Commun

September 2025

State Key Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Bio-Resources in Yunnan, College of Plant Protection, Yunnan Agricultural University, Kunming, China; Key Laboratory for Agro-Biodiversity and Pest Control of Ministry of Education, Yunnan Agricultural University, Kunming, China. Electronic ad

Crops leave a soil legacy with altruistic effects for other subsequent crops but not for themselves. While research has focused on improvements in soil physicochemical properties and the suppression of non-host pathogens, the altruistic microbiome and its assembly mechanism driven by root exudates remain largely unknown. Here, we identified the altruistic but self-detrimental phenomena when garlic rotated with other crops based on meta-analysis and in vivo experiments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Successive Spin Coating Induces an Order-Disorder Transition in a Block Copolymer Micellar Nanoarray.

J Phys Chem Lett

September 2025

CAS Key Laboratory of Mechanical Behavior and Design of Materials, Department of Modern Mechanics, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui 230027, China.

Controlling the spatial arrangement of nanodots is pivotal for functional nanomaterials and biointerfaces, and the spontaneous self-assembly of block copolymer micelles has been widely used to fabricate ordered nanostructures. However, achieving tunable disorder remains a fundamental challenge. Here, we demonstrate how successive spin coating dynamically modulates both density and disorder in micellar arrays, revealing an unexpected non-monotonic evolution of structural order.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF