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Polyethylene microplastics hamper aged biochar’s potential in mitigating greenhouse gas emissions

Carbon Research 2025 2 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.
Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Zhibo Wang, Yalan Chen, Ke Sun, Yalan Chen, Yalan Chen, Zhibo Wang, Yalan Chen, Ke Sun, Ke Sun, Xinru Liang, Yakov Kuzyakov Yakov Kuzyakov Yakov Kuzyakov Ke Sun, Ke Sun, Ke Sun, Ke Sun, Xinru Liang, Yan Zhang, Zhibo Wang, Anqi Zhang, Yakov Kuzyakov Yalan Chen, Ke Sun, Yalan Chen, Ke Sun, Ke Sun, Ke Sun, Yalan Chen, Yakov Kuzyakov Yang Li, Anna Gunina, Ke Sun, Ke Sun, Ke Sun, Anna Gunina, Yue Xiao, Yalan Chen, Chenrun Jiang, Ke Sun, Chenrun Jiang, Yalan Chen, Yakov Kuzyakov Anna Gunina, Zichen Han, Zichen Han, Ke Sun, Anna Gunina, Abeer S. Aloufi, Yakov Kuzyakov Ke Sun, Xinru Liang, Abeer S. Aloufi, Ke Sun, Xinru Liang, Yakov Kuzyakov Yakov Kuzyakov Zichen Han, Ke Sun, Zichen Han, Shishu Zhu, Ke Sun, Yakov Kuzyakov Yue Xiao, Yakov Kuzyakov Yan Zhang, Zhangliu Du, Yakov Kuzyakov Yakov Kuzyakov Shishu Zhu, Shishu Zhu, Yakov Kuzyakov

Summary

Polyethylene microplastics (1–5% by weight) significantly reduced the greenhouse gas-mitigating benefits of aged biochar in agricultural soil, decreasing soil aggregation and altering dissolved organic matter dynamics—raising concerns about microplastic interference with biochar-based carbon sequestration strategies.

Polymers

Abstract While biochar effectively reduces greenhouse gas emissions, the coincident microplastics will alter these benefits. To assess the long-term efficacy of biochar application in reducing emissions amidst microplastic interference, we investigated the interactive effects of polyethylene microplastics (1%–5% wt) and decadal biochar addition (aged biochar) on C and N stability in a Fluvic Cambisol. Aged biochar and polyethylene individually reduced CO 2 emissions by 49% and 18%, respectively, over 91-day incubation. This was due to decreased soil aggregation, dissolved organic matter (DOM) content, and increased DOM aromaticity, which reduced microbial biomass and chitinase activity associated with soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition. This ultimately led to increased accumulation of microbial necromass carbon (MNC) to soil stable carbon pool. Interestingly, the coexistence of polyethylene diminished the efficacy of biochar in mitigating CO 2 emissions (+ 44 ~ 82%) and stabilizing MNC (-18 ~ 23%). This was because the interaction between polyethylene and biochar facilitated macroaggregate formation and DOM accumulation and decreased DOM aromaticity, which increased microbial biomass and chitinase activity for SOM decomposition. Similar to soil C dynamics, aged biochar largely reduced N 2 O emissions by 54%, due to decreased nirK but increased nifH genes. Polyethylene increased N 2 O emissions by 5% and 25% in biochar-free and aged biochar soil, respectively, likely through upregulation of nirS and nirK but downregulating nifH gene expression. Thus, polyethylene microplastics may undermine the benefits of biochar in mitigating climate change, highlighting the necessity to recognize microplastics as a global change factor and to incorporate their role in elemental cycling alongside their global transport. Graphic Abstract

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