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  • Microplastic sizes 20240704

    Accepted author manuscript, 1.44 MB, PDF document

    Embargo ends: 3/01/26

    Licence: CC BY-NC-ND Show licence

DOI

  • Shahid Iqbal
    Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Yunju Li
    Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Jianchu Xu
    Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Fiona Ruth Worthy
    Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Heng Gui
    Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Turki Kh Faraj
    King Saud University
  • Davey L Jones
  • Dengpan Bu
    Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing

Microplastic pollution seriously affects global agroecosystems, strongly influencing soil processes and crop growth. Microplastics impact could be size-dependent, yet relevant field experiments are scarce. We conducted a field experiment in a soil-maize agroecosystem to assess interactions between microplastic types and sizes. Microplastics were added to soils used for maize cultivation: either polyethylene or polystyrene, of 75, 150, or 300 µm size. Overall, we found that microplastic contamination led to increased soil carbon, nitrogen and biogeochemical cycling. Polyethylene contamination was generally more detrimental than polystyrene. Smallest polyethylene microplastics (75 µm) were associated with two-fold raised CO2 and N2O emissions - hypothetically via raised microbial metabolic rates. Increased net greenhouse gases emissions were calculated to raise soil global warming potential of soils. We infer that MPs-associated emissions arose from altered soil processes. Polyethylene of 75 µm size caused the greatest reduction in soil carbon and nitrogen pools (1-1.5 %), with lesser impacts of larger microplastics. These smallest polyethylene microplastics caused the greatest declines in maize productivity (∼ 2-fold), but had no significant impact on harvest index. Scanning electron microscopy indicated that microplastics were taken up by the roots of maize plants, then also translocated to stems and leaves. These results raise serious concerns for the impact of microplastics pollution on future soil bio-geochemical cycling, food security and climate change. As microplastics will progressively degrade to smaller sizes, the environmental and agricultural impacts of current microplastics contamination of soils could increase over time; exacerbating potential planetary boundary threats.

Keywords

  • Zea mays/growth & development, Microplastics/toxicity, Global Warming, Soil Pollutants/toxicity, Soil/chemistry, Polyethylene, Nitrogen/analysis, Polystyrenes, Carbon/analysis, Greenhouse Gases/analysis
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)136993
JournalJournal of Hazardous Materials
Volume486
Early online date27 Dec 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Mar 2025
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