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An integrated evaluation of potentially toxic elements and microplastics in the highland soils of the northeastern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau
Summary
Researchers conducted the first integrated assessment of toxic elements and microplastics in grassland and farmland soils on the northeastern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. They found microplastic abundances ranging from 200 to over 3,600 particles per kilogram, with polypropylene dominating in grasslands and polyethylene in farmlands. The study reveals that even remote highland ecosystems on the Tibetan Plateau are not immune to microplastic contamination.
As gateways to the scenic Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (QTP), some underexplored five grassland (GLs) and three farmland (FLs) soil locations of northeastern counties were investigated. Preliminary detection showed that in the grazing and agricultural soils, elemental concentrations (Fe>Zn>Cr>Cu>Pb>Co>As>Cd) were up to 37 and 10 mg/g, but within the China soil standards, except Cd, while microplastics (MPs) abundances were 200-3640 and 280-973 particles/kg, respectively. Polypropylene (PP: 40-55 %) dominated in GLs mostly as fragments, whereas polyethylene (PE: 72-92 %) in FLs as films. Adsorption results demonstrated that potentially toxic elements (PTEs)-MPs' interaction may chiefly depend on their types and speciation in soils, the physiochemical structure of MPs, and surrounding conditions. The integrated two-dimensional risk assessment categorized three of five GLs under Risk Level VI (high pollution), whereas one of three FLs displayed Risk Level III (moderate pollution). Correlation analysis revealed that altitude, organic matter, soil clay content, and precipitation significantly affected PTEs (p ≤ 0.01), whereas MPs were influenced by altitude, soil clay content, precipitation (p ≤ 0.001), and population density (p ≤ 0.05). Comparison with low-land soils globally designated QTP as a vulnerable region to MPs due to the expanding development. Overall, our study provides a data set to understand the pollution scenario of highlands for its targeted management.
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