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Influence of agricultural activity in corn farming on airborne microplastic in surrounding elementary school

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Nai‐Tzu Chen, C. H. Yeh, Chien‐Cheng Jung

Summary

Researchers measured airborne microplastics inside an elementary school located near corn farms during different agricultural activity periods. They found that microplastic concentrations in the school's air increased significantly during active farming operations like plowing and harvesting. The study suggests that agricultural activities can contribute to indoor microplastic exposure in nearby buildings, particularly affecting children.

Polymers
Body Systems

Microplastics (MPs) have been widely detected in agricultural soils, and agricultural activities have been identified as an important factor influencing the abundance of MPs in the air. However, no studies have investigated whether agricultural activities are contributors to airborne MPs in buildings near farms. We collected airborne MP samples using an active sampling method from an elementary school near corn farms during different cultivation stages to assess the impact of agricultural activities on MPs in the study school near farms. Our data showed that the predominant shapes, sizes, colors, and polymer compositions were fragments, 2-50 μm, black or grey, and polyethylene terephthalate, respectively, during all cultivation stages. The highest and lowest MP concentrations were recorded during the land preparation (56.8 ± 7.4 particles/m, August 2022) and growth (2.5 ± 1.8 particles/m, February 2022) stages, respectively. A multiple-path particle dosimetry model revealed that the deposition fractions of MPs in humans were highest in the head; the highest and lowest deposition rates and fluxes of MPs in the airway were found during the land preparation and growth stages, respectively. The concentration of MPs did not present a positive correlation with potassium or crustal elemental concentration; however, it did show a positive association with temperature value. Therefore, our data did not show that corn cultivation influences MP concentrations in the study school near corn farms; instead, temperature was an important influencing factor.

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