Efficacy, microbial disruption, and algal toxicity of commercial antifouling coatings: A multi-level assessment
Journal article, 2026

To mitigate marine biofouling, copper- and zinc-based antifouling (AF) paints are widely used, although their severe environmental toxicity is well established. Silicone-based fouling-release coatings (FRCs) have emerged as alternatives that prevent adhesion through surface properties rather than biocidal activity. However, their effectiveness and ecological impact across marine environments remain insufficiently assessed. This study compared the performance and environmental effects of five commercial coatings: two biocidal, two FRCs, and one inert coating. Panels were statically exposed for seven months at five European sites spanning salinity and temperature gradients. Fouling development was monitored monthly, and coating leachates were tested on red macroalgae and bacteria. Ecotoxicological assays included growth inhibition of Ceramium tenuicorne , Aliivibrio fischeri bioluminescence, Escherichia coli stress biosensors, quorum-sensing (QS) assays, and biofilm formation of marine bacteria. Field experiments showed that FRCs consistently outperformed copper-based coatings in efficacy toward biofouling, even under static conditions. Copper-based leachates were highly toxic to C. tenuicorne (EC50 ≈ 0.46%), whereas FRC leachates showed minimal effects and were about 100 times less toxic. Microbial assays revealed that all coatings—including the biocide-free formulations—altered microbial physiology and behavior: leachates induced protein-damage responses, and both QS signaling and biofilm formation were species-specific, confirming that biocide-free does not mean biologically neutral. These results demonstrate that antifouling leachates act not only as toxicants but also as chemical cues shaping microbial communication and early colonization. Integrating microbial-level responses into antifouling evaluations is therefore essential. Overall, FRCs remain the most environmentally acceptable option, combining strong antifouling performance with minimal toxicity.

Antifouling coating

Fouling release coating

Sustainability

Ecotoxicology

Environment

Author

Emilie Adouane

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Transport, Energy and Environment

Lena Granhag

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Transport, Energy and Environment

Camille Ferré

Pierre and Marie Curie University (UPMC)

Raphaël Lami

Pierre and Marie Curie University (UPMC)

Carole Veckerlé

Pierre and Marie Curie University (UPMC)

Renaud Vuillemin

Observatoire Océanologique de Banyuls-sur-Mer

Erik Ytreberg

IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute

Marine Pollution Bulletin

0025-326X (ISSN) 1879-3363 (eISSN)

Vol. 226 119303

Lignin-vegetable oil oleogels toward fully green, sustainable, self-healing, wear resistant, anti-corrosion and anti-fouling coating

Formas (2022-01047), 2023-01-01 -- 2025-12-31.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Environmental Sciences

Ecology

DOI

10.1016/j.marpolbul.2026.119303

PubMed

41592483

More information

Latest update

2/2/2026 1