Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1016/j.oneear.2025.101446
Licence creative commons licence
Title (Primary) Potential planetary health impacts of the airborne plastisphere
Author Li, C.; Jin, L.N.; Bank, M.S.; Fan, C.; Gillings, M.R.; Zhao, T.; Han, Y.; Chen, T.; Gao, M.; Zhu, D.; Chen, Q.; Zhu, G.; Wang, J.; Wang, L.; Liu, J.; Yuan, G.; Huang, Q.; Wang, X.; Jahnke, A. ORCID logo ; Brahney, J.; Allen, S.; Arp, H.P.H.; Oberbeckmann, S.; Bergmann, M.; Pointing, S.B.; Zhang, D.; Rillig, M.C.
Source Titel One Earth
Year 2025
Department EXPO
Volume 8
Issue 10
Page From art. 101446
Language englisch
Topic T9 Healthy Planet
Keywords airborne microplastics; airborne microorganisms; atmospheric transport; biodiversity; climate impacts; ecosystem function; microbial risks; One Health; plastic pollution; the plastisphere
Abstract Microplastics are a ubiquitous yet long-overlooked component of airborne particulate matter. The surface of these plastic particles provides a unique niche for microorganisms, collectively known as the plastisphere. The plastisphere in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems harbors microbial communities with distinct compositions, structures, and functional profiles, posing potential planetary health risks. The characteristics, fate, and impacts of the microbiome associated with airborne microplastics, however, remain largely unknown. In this review, we fill the knowledge gaps by exploring how airborne microplastics serve as key habitats for microorganisms and the potential planetary health implications. We show that microplastics are expected to carry and sustain microorganisms over long distances and timescales in air, potentially dispersing pathogens, antibiotic-resistance genes, and other bioactive agents across ecosystems. These interactions may perturb ecological processes and biological health on a planetary scale. Interdisciplinary research and innovative methodologies are urgently required to better understand and mitigate the airborne plastisphere risks.
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=31698
Li, C., Jin, L.N., Bank, M.S., Fan, C., Gillings, M.R., Zhao, T., Han, Y., Chen, T., Gao, M., Zhu, D., Chen, Q., Zhu, G., Wang, J., Wang, L., Liu, J., Yuan, G., Huang, Q., Wang, X., Jahnke, A., Brahney, J., Allen, S., Arp, H.P.H., Oberbeckmann, S., Bergmann, M., Pointing, S.B., Zhang, D., Rillig, M.C. (2025):
Potential planetary health impacts of the airborne plastisphere
One Earth 8 (10), art. 101446 10.1016/j.oneear.2025.101446