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Impact of long-term conventional and biodegradable film mulching on microplastic abundance, soil structure and organic carbon in a cotton field

Environmental Pollution 2024 36 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Markus Flury, Kai Wang Kai Wang Kai Wang Markus Flury, Kai Wang Rui Jiang, Rui Jiang, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Min Wei, Kai Wang Kai Wang Kai Wang Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Min Wei, Markus Flury, Kai Wang Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Min Wei, Min Wei, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Min Wei, Anna Gunina, Qiang Li, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Kai Wang Markus Flury, Jun Lv, Anna Gunina, Jun Lv, Rui Jiang, Jun Lv, Kai Wang Qiang Li, Markus Flury, Qiang Li, Markus Flury, Jun Lv, Jun Lv, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Kai Wang Markus Flury, Rui Jiang, Markus Flury, Kai Wang Markus Flury, Rui Jiang, Anna Gunina, Qiang Li, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Anna Gunina, Kai Wang Jun Lv, Kai Wang Jun Lv, Kai Wang Kai Wang

Summary

Researchers compared microplastic levels in cotton fields after 23 years of plastic film mulching and found that switching to biodegradable film actually produced more total microplastics than continuing with conventional polyethylene film. The biodegradable film broke down into many small particles that also reduced beneficial soil microbes and dissolved organic carbon. This challenges the idea that biodegradable agricultural films are a simple solution to farmland plastic pollution.

Polymers

Biodegradable film mulching has attracted considerable attention as an alternative to conventional plastic film mulching. However, biodegradable films generate transitory microplastics during the film degradation. How much of this transitory microplastics is being formed and their impact on soil health during long-term use of biodegradable plastic film are not known. Here, we quantified the amounts of microplastics (0.1-5 mm in size) in the topsoil (0-20 cm) of two cotton fields with different mulching cultivations: (1) continuous use of conventional (polyethylene, PE) film for 23 years (Plot 1), and (2) 15 years use of conventional film followed by 8 years of biodegradable (polybutylene adipate-co-terephthalate, PBAT) film (Plot 2). We further assessed the impacts of the microplastics on selected soil health parameters, with a focus on soil carbon contents and fluxes. The total amount of microplastics was larger in Plot 2 (8507 particles kg) than in Plot 1 (6767 particles kg). The microplastics (0.1-1 mm) were identified as derived from PBAT and PE in Plot 2; while in Plot 1, the microplastics were identified as PE. Microplastics > 1 mm were exclusively identified as PE in both plots. Soil organic carbon was higher (27 vs. 30 g C kg soil) but dissolved organic carbon (120 vs. 74 mg C kg soil) and microbial biomass carbon were lower (413 vs. 246 mg C kg soil) in Plot 2 compared to the Plot 1. Based on C natural abundance, we found that in Plot 2, carbon flow was dominated from micro- (<0.25 mm) to macroaggregates (0.25-2 and >2 mm), whereas in Plot 1, carbon flow occurred between large and small macroaggregates, and from micro-to macroaggregates. Thus, long-term application of biodegradable film changed the abundance of microplastics, and organic carbon accumulation compared to conventional polyethylene film mulching.

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