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Meta Analysis ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 1 ? Systematic review or meta-analysis. Synthesizes findings across many studies. Strongest evidence. Sign in to save

Meta-analysis reveals the combined effects of microplastics and heavy metal on plants

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 51 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 80 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Ce Wen, Qiuying An, Qiuying An, Ce Wen, Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Ce Wen, Ce Wen, Changzhou Yan Ce Wen, Ce Wen, Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Ce Wen, Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Ce Wen, Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan Changzhou Yan

Summary

A meta-analysis of 57 studies found that the combined toxicity of microplastics and heavy metals on plants is driven primarily by the heavy metals, while microplastics mainly interact by inducing oxidative stress damage. Microplastic biodegradation emerged as a core factor influencing heavy metal accumulation in plants, with culture environment, heavy metal type, exposure duration, and microplastic concentration and size all playing roles.

Study Type Review

The combined pollution of microplastics and heavy metals is becoming increasingly serious, and its effects on toxicology and heavy metal accumulation of plants are closely related to crop yield and population health. Here, we collected 57 studies to investigate the effect of microplastics on heavy metal accumulation in plants and their combined toxicity. An assessment was conducted to discover the primary pollutant responsible for the toxicity of combined pollution on plants. The study examined the influence of microplastic characteristics, heavy metal characteristics, and experimental methods on this pollutant. The results showed that combined toxicity of plants was more similar to heavy metals, whereas microplastics interacted with heavy metals mainly by inducing oxidative stress damage. Culture environment, heavy metal type, experimental duration, microplastic concentration and microplastic size were the main factors affecting heavy metal accumulation in plants. There was a negative correlation between experimental duration, microplastic concentration and microplastic size with heavy metal accumulation in plants. The interactions among influencing factors were found, and microplastic biodegradation was the core factor of the strong interaction. These results provided comprehensive insights and guiding strategies for environmental and public health risks caused by the combined pollution of microplastics and heavy metals.

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