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Unveiling the impact of biodegradable polylactic acid microplastics on meadow soil health
Summary
Scientists studied how biodegradable PLA microplastics affect meadow soil over 60 days and found they changed soil chemistry, enzyme activity, and microbial communities. Smaller PLA particles had a greater impact on enzyme activity, while larger particles changed soil properties more. These findings suggest that even biodegradable plastics can significantly alter soil health when they break down into microplastics.
Soil microplastics (MPs) pollution has garnered considerable attention in recent years. The use of biodegradable plastics for mulching has led to significant quantities of plastic entering agro-ecosystems. However, the effects of biodegradable polylactic acid (PLA) plastics on meadow soils remain underexplored. This study investigates the impacts of PLA-MPs of varying particle sizes and concentrations on soil physicochemical properties, enzyme activities, and microbial communities through a 60-day incubation experiment. PLA-MPs increased the pH, soil organic matter, total nitrogen (TN) and available potassium (AK) content, as well as enhanced the activities of superoxide dismutase (S-SOD), peroxidase (S-POD), soil catalase (S-CAT), β-glucosidase (S-β-GC) and urease (S-UE) activities. Conversely, a decrease in alkaline phosphatase (S-ALP) activity was observed. The influence of PLA-MPs on soil physicochemical properties was more pronounced with larger particle sizes, whereas smaller particles had a greater effect on enzyme activities. Additionally, PLA-MPs led to an increase in the abundance of Acidobacteriota, Chloroflexi, and Gemmatimonadota, while the abundance of Proteobacteria, Actinobacteriota, and Patescibacteria declined. Mantel test analysis showed that changes in microbial community composition affected soil properties such as pH, AK, S-UE and S-β-GC. Phylogenetic Investigation of Communities by Reconstruction of Unobserved States (PICRUSt2) analysis demonstrated that PLA-MPs modify bacterial metabolic pathways. Our results suggest that particle size and concentration of PLA-MPs differentially affect soil nutrients and microbial community structure and function, with more significant effects observed at larger particle sizes and higher concentrations.
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