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Effect of Preferential Microplastics Leaching Through Macropores on Vertical Soil Particle Transport

European Journal of Soil Science 2025 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ahsan Maqbool, Wang Li, Wang Li, Ahsan Maqbool, Wang Li, Wang Li, Wang Li, Wang Li, Wang Li, Wang Li, Wang Li, Wang Li, Wang Li, Ahsan Maqbool, Wang Li, Wang Li, Ahsan Maqbool, Ahsan Maqbool, Ahsan Maqbool, Ahsan Maqbool, Wang Li, Wang Li, Wang Li, Ahsan Maqbool, María‐Auxiliadora Soriano, María‐Auxiliadora Soriano, José A. Gómez, José A. Gómez, Wang Li, Ahsan Maqbool, Wang Li, Wang Li, José A. Gómez, Christine Stumpp Christine Stumpp Christine Stumpp Wang Li, Christine Stumpp María‐Auxiliadora Soriano, María‐Auxiliadora Soriano, María‐Auxiliadora Soriano, José A. Gómez, Christine Stumpp Christine Stumpp José A. Gómez, José A. Gómez, José A. Gómez, Ahsan Maqbool, Christine Stumpp Christine Stumpp Ahsan Maqbool, José A. Gómez, Wang Li, Christine Stumpp

Summary

Using packed soil columns with artificial macropores of 2, 3, and 4 mm, researchers investigated how macropore size affects the leaching of microplastics with different shapes and polymer types under rainfall simulations. Macropore size significantly influenced microplastic transport, with larger macropores enabling faster and more extensive particle migration.

ABSTRACT Microplastic particles are an emerging pollutant that can be transported through preferential pathways, such as macropores. Agricultural soils, prone to microplastic contamination, often have macroporosity due to biological activity, natural formation of soil aggregates, desiccation cracks, or no‐till practices. However, little is known about the factors controlling microplastic leaching through soil macropores. In this study, artificial soil‐like macroporosity (2.5% v/v) was developed in packed soil columns to investigate the effect of macropore size, that is, 2, 3 and 4 mm, on the leaching of microplastics of three sizes, that is, 53–63, 75–90 and 125–150 μm, and the influence of both factors on the vertical mobilisation of soil particles. Under artificial rainfall (30.6 mm h −1 for 30 min), microplastics were preferentially leached, with over 50% of the 75–90 μm and 125–150 μm particles transported, regardless of macropore size. Macropores without microplastics leached a significant amount of soil particles. Macropore characteristics, including pore diameter, number, and surface area, were strongly correlated with vertical soil particle transport. Microplastics increased vertical soil particle transport through macropores by a factor of about 1.6. A conceptual framework was developed to explain the observed mechanisms, emphasising the collisional forces exerted by microplastic particles detaching soil particles. Our results suggest that microplastic flow induced additional stress on macropore walls, intensifying soil particle mobilisation. This study also highlights that macropores (i.e., biopores) might be an underestimated driver of microplastic transport in the vadose zone and their role in intensifying vertical displacement of surface soil to subsurface layers. Given the environmental implications, further research will be needed to study these processes under field conditions.

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