[OANNES Foro] Newly-evolved microbes may be breaking down ocean plastics
Mario Cabrejos
casal en infotex.com.pe
Vie Jun 2 07:53:12 PDT 2017
Newly-evolved microbes may be breaking down ocean plastics
By Michael Le Page
25 May 2017
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2132650-newly-evolved-microbes-may-be-b
reaking-down-ocean-plastics/?cmpid=NLC%7CNSNS%7C2017-0106-GLOBAL
<https://www.newscientist.com/article/2132650-newly-evolved-microbes-may-be-
breaking-down-ocean-plastics/?cmpid=NLC%7CNSNS%7C2017-0106-GLOBAL&utm_medium
=NLC&utm_source=NSNS> &utm_medium=NLC&utm_source=NSNS
Plastic. There should be hundreds of thousands of tonnes of the stuff
floating around in our oceans. But we are finding less than expected -
perhaps because living organisms are evolving the ability to break it down.
Plastic production is rising exponentially, so ever more of it should be
ending up in the oceans, says Ricard Sole, who studies complex systems at
the Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona.
But surveys of areas where floating plastic accumulates, such as the North
Atlantic gyre, are not finding nearly as much plastic as expected.
Mystery of the missing plastics
In fact, there's <http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fee.1297> only a tenth to a
hundredth as much plastic as expected - and the amount of floating plastic
does not appear to be increasing. "The trend should be there," Sole says.
This lack of trend cannot be explained by physical processes, according to
his team's mathematical models. Instead, they propose that there has been a
population boom in microbes that have evolved the ability to biodegrade
plastic.
Other researchers agree that surveys are finding far
<https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22530060-200-plastic-age-how-its-res
haping-rocks-oceans-and-life/> less plastic in the oceans than expected.
However, they say there are several other possible explanations for this
<https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn26958-oceans-swallowed-13-million-to
nnes-of-plastic-in-2010/> "missing plastic".
Surprisingly, even if ocean plastic is being degraded much faster than
thought, it is not clear that this is a good thing. "It is difficult to
say," says Matthew Cole of Exeter University in the UK.
For instance, biodegradation could be speeding up the breakdown of large
pieces of plastic into lots of very tiny pieces, which might have a greater
overall impact.
Plastic also contains various additives that could get released and enter
the food chain if the plastic part biodegrades, says environmental chemist
Alexandra ter Halle of the Laboratoire des IMRCP in France.
"To really tackle the plastic problem, we need to stop it getting into the
oceans in the first place," Cole says.
The 'platisphere'
In theory it is possible that some microbes have evolved the ability to
break down plastics. Studies by Linda Amaral-Zettler of the Netherlands
Institute for Sea Research show that
<https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23794-plastisphere-microbes-go-to-se
a-on-flotsam-fragments/> the microbes colonising floating plastic are quite
distinct from those in the surrounding water, and suggest some are feeding
on pollutants.
In effect, the plastic is creating a whole new ecosystem that Amaral-Zettler
and colleagues call "the plastisphere".
But when ter Halle looked at the DNA of the organisms on floating plastic in
the North Atlantic, <https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.05.059> she
didn't find any microbes known to be capable of breaking down plastic. That
could be because they have not yet been discovered of course - there
<https://www.newscientist.com/blog/shortsharpscience/2008/06/counting-in-bac
terial-world.html> could be millions of unknown microbes still.
Amaral-Zettler and ter Halle think it is more likely that floating plastic
is simply sinking to the seafloor as colonising organisms weigh it down, or
breaking into such microscopic pieces that it is not being caught in the
nets of research vessels. It could also be being swallowed by living
organisms, or carried by currents to unexpected parts of the ocean.
The sinking explanation might also be compatible with his findings, says
Sole. His study does not prove that
<https://www.newscientist.com/article/2128659-plastic-munching-caterpillars-
may-show-us-how-to-dissolve-waste/> microbes are metabolising plastic, but
the lack of an upward trend can only be explained by a biological response
that can increase in proportion to the amount of plastic. If a physical
process was responsible, there would still be an upward trend, he says.
It is possible that some plastic is being biodegraded, Amaral-Zettler says,
but it could be over too long time-scale - a hundred years, say - to explain
the missing plastic. And even if it is happening much faster, there'd still
be a problem.
Plastics are polluting every part of the ocean, from
<https://www.newscientist.com/article/2131051-remote-pacific-island-found-bu
ried-under-tonnes-of-plastic-waste/> the beaches of remote islands to the
deepest parts of the sea. Large pieces of plastic can accumulate in the
stomach of animals such as turtles, which then starve to death.
While there may be less than expected, large amounts of floating plastic are
found in the subtropical gyres where surface waters circle. While terms such
as the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch" conjure up visions of litter-covered
seas, much of the floating plastic in the ocean consists of tiny pieces just
a few millimetres wide or smaller, which are not obvious to the naked eye at
all. Its impact on marine life is not clear, either.
Various schemes have been proposed to remove this plastic from the oceans,
but trying to clean up the oceans is impractical, says Amaral-Zettler. "We
need to look at prevention and reduction at the start."
Journal reference: Biorxiv,
<http://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/05/09/135582?%3Fcollection> DOI:
10.1101/135582
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