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Presence of microplastics enhanced the toxicity of silver nanoparticles on the collembolan Folsomia candida

Chemosphere 2024 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ying Ding, J. Zheng, Yaning Wang, Di Wu, Dong Zhu

Summary

Researchers examined the combined effects of polyvinyl chloride microplastics and silver nanoparticles on the soil organism Folsomia candida over 28 days. They found that co-exposure produced synergistic toxic effects, reducing reproduction by over 50% and increasing silver accumulation in the organisms by nearly 88% compared to silver nanoparticle exposure alone. The study suggests that the presence of microplastics in soil can amplify the toxicity of other contaminants by enhancing their bioaccumulation.

Polymers
Body Systems

There is growing interest in interactions of microplastics (MPs) with other pollutants. However, there is limited understanding of the combined effects of MPs and silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) on nontarget soil organisms. This work aimed to examine the effects of exposure to various AgNPs' concentrations alone (0, 0.1, 1, 10, 100, 1000 mg kg, 50 nm) and in combination with polyvinyl chloride microplastics (PVC MPs, 80-250 μm) at 0.1% concentration for 28 days on reproduction, Ag accumulation, C/N ratio, and isotopic fractionation of the standard soil fauna collembolan Folsomia candida. Results showed that compared to the AgNPs exposure alone, the presence of MPs significantly reduced reproduction by 51.4% and markedly increased Ag content in collembolans by 87.7% at 1000 mg kg AgNPs, which evidenced a synergistic effect. Co-exposure to MPs and AgNPs resulted in a noticeable reduction in the C/N ratio in F. candida body tissues by 9.90% and 5.27% at 1 and 10 mg kg AgNPs, respectively, showing additive and synergistic effects. Additionally, this co-exposure altered stable isotope fractionation, with the highest increments of δN by 32.3% and inhibition of δC by 2.62%, demonstrating the turnover of nutrients shift in the collembolan tissues. Collectively, this study demonstrates that con-current exposure to environmentally relevant concentration of MPs and relatively high doses of AgNPs synergistically induces toxic effects on F. candida, leading to Ag accumulation and reproduction decline. These findings imply that MPs could alter collembolans' responses to AgNPs exposure, potentially enhancing the metal ions' bioavailability in soil environments and posing ecotoxicological threats to soil-dwelling organisms.

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