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Determinants of environmental changes in human-modified ecosystems: Effects of plastics on moisture gradients, nutrients, and clay properties
Summary
Researchers examined how plastic pollution affects soil properties in human-modified ecosystems through field experiments in China and Rwanda, combined with laboratory tests on clay mixed with PET microplastics. They found that microplastics altered the structural properties of natural clay, decreasing moisture content while increasing density and load-bearing capacity. The study suggests that plastic accumulation in soils can fundamentally change moisture gradients, nutrient availability, and physical soil characteristics.
Plastic pollution poses a significant threat to ecosystem health worldwide. This study examines the determinants of environmental changes in human-modified ecosystems through a quantitative-qualitative system dynamics modeling approach: field experiments conducted on a 310 m unsaturated clay-rich bed and a 2.5 m clay-rich shore of a plastic-impacted pond in Shenzhen, China, and a 1.17 ha plastic-impacted clay pit in Musanze, Rwanda; laboratory experiments involving Modified Proctor (MP) and California Bearing Ratio (CBR) tests on natural clay reinforced with polyethylene terephthalate (PET) microplastics, with diameters ranging from 0.25 to 5 mm and at concentrations of 1.25 %, 2.5 %, 3.75 %, 5 %, and 10 % by weight of clay; and plastic dynamic flows analyzed by modeling the life cycle of PET. Field experiments showed that mulch type and thickness were critical factors influencing crack distribution in a plastic-impacted pond bed. Specifically, cracks were dominant in areas with pronounced desiccation and lacking filamentous green algae and PET-dominated plastic waste. Along the 2.5 m moisture gradient in a plastic-impacted pond bed, temperature and moisture significantly influenced nutrients, particularly in pronounced desiccation zones. Laboratory experiments showed that microplastics altered the structural properties of natural clay, decreasing moisture content while increasing dry density and load-bearing capacity. The plastic life cycle underscored the roles of industrial and consumer practices, environmental conditions, and waste management and recycling inefficiencies in driving environmental changes in human-modified ecosystems. The findings underscore the need for effective plastic waste management and recycling to mitigate the ecological impacts of plastic pollution in ecosystems.
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