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Microplastics and Co-pollutants in soil and marine environments: Sorption and desorption dynamics in unveiling invisible danger and key to ecotoxicological risk assessment

Chemosphere 2024 29 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Haruna Adamu, Haruna Adamu, Zakariyya Uba Zango, Zakariyya Uba Zango, Zakariyya Uba Zango, Abdurrashid Haruna, Usman Bello, Ahmed Sabo, Zakariyya Uba Zango, Usman IbrahimTafida, Usman IbrahimTafida, Zaharadden N. Garba, Zaharadden N. Garba, Suleiman Gani Musa, Sharhabil Musa Yahaya, Usman Bello, Usman IbrahimTafida, Usman IbrahimTafida, Usman Bello, Haruna Adamu, Mohammad Qamar Ummulkhairi Nasiru Danmallam, Ummulkhairi Nasiru Danmallam, Adeola Akeem Akinpelu, A.S. Ibrahim, A.S. Ibrahim, Ahmed Sabo, Zulkifli Merican Aljunid Merican, Mohammad Qamar

Summary

This review examines how microplastics act as invisible carriers of other pollutants in soil and marine environments, concentrating and transporting harmful chemicals. Researchers analyzed the sorption and desorption dynamics that determine when pollutants attach to or release from microplastic surfaces. The study emphasizes that understanding these dynamics is essential for accurately assessing the combined ecological risks of microplastics and their co-pollutants.

Microplastics (MPs) and their co-pollutants pose significant threats to soil and marine environments, necessitating understanding of their colonization processes to combat the plastic pandemic and protect ecosystems. MPs can act as invisible carriers, concentrating and transporting pollutants, leading to a more widespread and potentially toxic impact than the presence of either MPs or the pollutants alone. Analyzing the sorption and desorption dynamics of MPs is crucial for understanding pollutants amplification and predicting the fate and transport of pollutants in soil and marine environments. This review provides an in-depth analysis of the sorption and desorption dynamics of MPs, highlighting the importance of considering these dynamics in ecotoxicological risk assessment of MPs pollution. The review identifies limitations of current frameworks that neglect these interactions and proposes incorporating sorption and desorption data into robust frameworks to improve the ability to predict ecological risks posed by MPs and co-pollutants in soil and marine environments. However, failure to address the interplay between sorption and desorption can result in underestimation of the true impact of MPs and co-pollutants, affecting livelihoods and agro-employments, and exacerbate poverty and community disputes (SDGs 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, and 16). It can also affect food production and security (SDG 2), life below water and life on land (DSGs 14 and 15), cultural practices, and natural heritage (SDG 11.4). Hence, it is necessary to develop new approaches to ecotoxicological risk assessment that consider sorption and desorption processes in the interactions between the components in the framework to address the identified limitations.

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