Marine Bacteria Colonization Rates on Microplastics in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre
Loading...
Date
Authors
Miller, Allisyn
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Plastic pollution is a growing concern in the microecology of the oceans. Studying bacteria
colonization rates on plastic provides one way of understanding of how toxic debris can move through the
food chain through ingestion. This process of toxins moving through the food chain is called
biomagnification and can eventually reach humans. To evaluate bacterial colonization rates, seawater was
collected in coastal waters of Hawaii and near the Pacific garbage patch (GPGP). Seawater
was intermixed with 5 different kinds of clean plastics then timed to determine how long it took bacteria
to colonize the plastic surfaces. Bacteria on the plastic were counted under an epifluorescence microscope
then divided by the time of colonization to determine the rate. Alongside the colonization rate, surface
microplastics were collected with a manta net; then sized and classified with a dissection microscope.
Seawater was collected from a Niskin bottle attached to a CTD rosette to calculate bacterial abundance
with the use of a Guava flow cytometer. The findings of the research displayed little to no correlation
between surface bacterial abundance and plastic density, with an R2 value of 0.1072. Bacteria were found
to colonize plastics at 48 and 96 hours in the waters near the Pacific garbage patch with a rate of 7.4E+04
cells/mm. The colonization rates and plastic abundance support evidence of plastics being integrated into
the ocean ecology.
