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Nitrogen Fertilization Alleviates Microplastic Effects on Soil Protist Communities and Rape (Brassica napus L.) Growth

Microorganisms 2025 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ge Wang, Mei Wei, Sun Qian, Ting Shen, Miaomiao Xie, Dongyan Liu

Summary

Researchers examined how polyethylene microplastics and nitrogen fertilizer individually and together affect soil microorganisms and rapeseed crop growth. They found that while microplastics alone reduced protist diversity and altered soil communities, adding nitrogen fertilizer counteracted many of these negative effects. The study suggests that nitrogen fertilization may be a practical strategy to buffer agricultural soils against some of the harmful impacts of microplastic contamination.

Polymers
Body Systems

Agricultural plastic mulch enhances crop yields but leads to persistent microplastic contamination in soils. Concurrently, nitrogen (N) fertilization and atmospheric deposition profoundly reshape microbial ecosystems. This study examined the individual and interactive effects of polyethylene microplastics (PE, 1% w/w) and nitrogen addition (N, 180 kg ha-1 yr-1) on soil protist communities and rape (Brassica napus L.) productivity. High-throughput sequencing and soil-plant trait analyses revealed that PE alone reduced the soil water retention and the rape biomass while elevating the soil total carbon content, C/N ratios, and NH₄⁺-N/NO₃--N levels. Conversely, N addition significantly boosted the rape biomass and the chlorophyll content, likely through enhanced nutrient availability. Strikingly, the combined PE_N treatment exhibited antagonistic interactions; protist diversity and functional group composition stabilized to resemble the control conditions, and the rape biomass under the PE_N treatment showed no difference from the CK (with basal fertilizer only), despite significant reductions under the PE treatment alone. Soil nutrient dynamics (e.g., the SWC and the C/N ratio) and the protist community structure collectively explained 96% of the biomass variation. These findings highlight the potential of nitrogen fertilization to mitigate microplastic-induced soil degradation, offering a pragmatic strategy to stabilize crop productivity in contaminated agricultural systems. This study underscores the importance of balancing nutrient management with pollution control to sustain soil health under global microplastic and nitrogen deposition pressures.

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