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Machine learning-based prediction and model interpretability analysis for algal growth affected by microplastics

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Wenhao Li, Zhao Xu, Xudong Xu, Lei Wang, Hongwen Sun, Chunguang Liu

Summary

Researchers used machine learning models to predict how microplastics affect algal growth and found that exposure time, microplastic concentration, and particle size are the most important factors. Smaller microplastics and longer exposure periods had the greatest negative effects on algae, particularly when particles were smaller than the algal cells. The study provides a data-driven approach for assessing the ecological risks of microplastic pollution in aquatic environments.

Microplastics (MPs), the plastic debris smaller than 5 mm, are ubiquitous in waterbodies and have been shown to be toxic to aquatic organisms, especially to microalgae. The aim of this study is to use machine learning models to predict the effects of MPs on algal growth and to evaluate the relative importance of different features (MP properties, algal characteristics, and experimental conditions) through model interpretability analysis. Based on literature search, 408 samples were collected as inputs for the models. Three integrated machine learning algorithms, Random Forest (RF), Categorical Boosting (CatBoost), and Light Gradient Boosting Machine (LightGBM), were used to construct classification prediction models for algal growth. Our results show that the LightGBM model yields the best performance, with a total accuracy rate of 0.8305 and a Kappa value of 0.7165. The model interpretability analysis indicates that "Exposure time", "MP concentrations", and "MP size" are the most influential features affecting algal growth. For "Exposure time", which belongs to experimental conditions, 72-216 h of MP exposure was found to exert the greatest effects on algal growth. The impact of MPs on algal growth increases with increasing MP concentrations over the range of 0 to 300 mg/L. Smaller MPs exert more effects on algal growth, and MPs are more likely to inhibit algal growth when the ratio of algal cell size to MP size is higher. Our study successfully established prediction models for evaluating the effects of various MP properties on algal growth. This study also provides insights into the prediction of MP toxicity in organisms.

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