Plastic Debris in Ocean Has Spawned a ‘Plastisphere’ of Organisms

The plastic debris that litters the world’s oceans has developed its own unique and diverse microbial ecosystem, researchers report. The microscopic community, which scientists dubbed the “plastisphere,”

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Diatom on plastic debris

Zettler, et al./ES&T
Diatom and bacteria on plastic debris
includes more than 1,000 species of algae, bacteria, microscopic plants, symbiotic microbes, and possibly even pathogens, the researchers say in Environmental Science & Technology. Some of the plastisphere microbes, many of which had never before been documented, contain genes that could help break down hydrocarbons, indicating the microbes may play a role in degrading the debris, the research shows. Plastic trash is the most abundant type of debris in the ocean, inflicting harm on fish, birds, and marine mammals that are entangled by it or ingest it. Until now, researchers hadn’t looked at microbes living on the debris, which make up a sort of artificial “microbial reef,” one of the scientists said.