Abstract

Plastic pollution represents a threat for biological communities and the ecological functions they provide in river ecosystems. In this study, we compared the microbial colonization of two plastics (biodegradable and non-biodegradable) and three natural substrata (leaves, sediment and rocks) in two study sites of an urbanized watershed differing in their plastic-contamination degree (upstream and downstream). The density and diversity of bacterial, fungal and algal communities, as well as the extracellular enzymatic activities β-glucosidase (GLU), N-acetyl-glucosaminidase (NAG) and phosphatase (PHO), were analyzed in each substrata and site over a four-week colonization experiment. Results showed higher microbial densities and enzymatic activities in leaves and sediment compared to plastics and rocks, probably due to the greater availability of organic carbon and nutrients in the former substrata. However, the microbial colonization of the two plastics was only different in the downstream site where bacterial density and enzymatic activities were higher in the biodegradable compared to the non-biodegradable plastic. Accordingly, the presence of biodegradable plastics would enhance the heterotrophic metabolism in plastic-polluted rivers.

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