0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Polyethylene microplastics decrease the bioaccumulation and toxicity of picoxystrobin and azoxystrobin to microalgae Scenedesmus obliquus

Marine Pollution Bulletin 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Qingqing Jiang, Hongyuan Xu, Yongchen Zong, Rimao Hua, Xiangwei Wu, Jiaying Xue

Summary

Researchers found that polyethylene microplastics actually reduced the toxicity of two common fungicides to the microalgae Scenedesmus obliquus by adsorbing the chemicals and lowering their freely dissolved concentrations in water. Smaller microplastic particles at higher concentrations had the greatest protective effect, promoting algal growth and chlorophyll production compared to fungicide-only treatments. The study demonstrates an antagonistic interaction where microplastics act as a physical sorbent that decreases the bioavailability of certain pesticides.

Polymers

Fungicide residues can interact with microplastics (MPs) in the aquatic environment leading to mixed toxicity on phytoplankton. The investigation of biological effects obtained from combined fungicide and MPs is essential for proper evaluation of the ecological risks. Until now, the mechanisms that how polyethylene (PE) MPs altered the toxicity of picoxystrobin and azoxystrobin on microalgae Scenedesmus obliquus was unknown. Here, the impacts of PE-MPs on freely dissolved concentrations (C) of the 2 fungicides and their toxicity to microalgae growth were assessed after 96 h exposure. We found that the presence of PE-MPs reduced the bioaccumulation of picoxystrobin and azoxystrobin in microalgae through decreasing the fungicide C. Furthermore, inhibition effects on microalgae growth and chlorophyll generation was alleviated significantly in the combination of fungicide and PE-MPs compared with the fungicide alone. Specifically, 400 mg/L of 25 μm PE induced more profound influences than other treatments in terms of decreasing C, promoting growth rate, and increasing chlorophyll content that might be attributed to its higher adsorption capacity for the fungicides. Our results demonstrated the antagonism between the fungicides and PE-MPs, clarifying that PE-MPs functioned in lowering the bioavailability and acte toxicity of the 2 strobilurin fungcides to microalgae via physical adsorption especially under the small size and high level of PE-MPs. This study provides evidences that the existence of MPs is capable of influencing the toxicological behavior of fungicides in the environment, and can be a starting point for more sophisticated mechanism investigation of joint toxicity for fungicides and MPs.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Effect of microplastics on the toxicity of chlorpyrifos to the microalgae Isochrysis galbana, clone t-ISO

Researchers tested how polyethylene microplastics affect the toxicity of the pesticide chlorpyrifos to the marine microalga Isochrysis galbana. While microplastics alone did not impair algal growth, chlorpyrifos caused significant growth inhibition at higher concentrations. When microplastics were loaded with chlorpyrifos, they partially reduced the pesticide's toxicity by adsorbing it, though at higher pesticide doses the combined exposure still inhibited algal growth.

Article Tier 2

Microplastics reduce the bioaccumulation and oxidative stress damage of triazole fungicides in fish

Researchers found that microplastics can reduce the bioaccumulation and oxidative stress damage of triazole fungicides in fish, suggesting that microplastic-pesticide interactions may alter the expected toxicity of agricultural chemicals in aquatic organisms.

Article Tier 2

Effects of Microplastics on the Adsorption and Bioavailability of Three Strobilurin Fungicides

This study investigated how microplastics affect the adsorption and bioavailability of three strobilurin fungicides, finding that polystyrene and polyethylene microplastics reduced pesticide availability in water but altered how the fungicides accumulated in and harmed zebrafish. The results demonstrate that microplastics can change the environmental behavior of agricultural pesticides in ways that are difficult to predict.

Meta Analysis Tier 1

Micro- and nanoplastics interact with conventional pollutants on microalgae: Synthesis through meta-analysis

This meta-analysis of 933 experimental assessments found that micro- and nanoplastics interact with conventional pollutants like heavy metals and pesticides on microalgae in predominantly antagonistic ways, meaning the combined toxicity was often less than expected. This occurs because plastic particles adsorb pollutants from the water, reducing their bioavailability, though the effect varies by plastic size, charge, and aging.

Article Tier 2

Micro-polyethylene particles reduce the toxicity of nano zinc oxide in marine microalgae by adsorption

Researchers discovered that polyethylene microplastic particles reduced the toxicity of zinc oxide nanoparticles to marine microalgae by adsorbing the nanoparticles onto their surface, revealing that microplastics can modify the bioavailability of co-occurring contaminants.

Share this paper