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Microplastics derived from plastic mulch films and their carrier function effect on the environmental risk of pesticides

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 44 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 70 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xin Bao, Long Chen, Long Chen, Long Chen, Xin Bao, Xin Bao, Xin Bao, Zhiyuan Meng, Yuntong Gu, Yuntong Gu, Zhiyuan Meng, Zijian Wang, Zijian Wang, Zhiyuan Meng, Zhiyuan Meng, Long Chen, Long Chen, Zijian Wang, Long Chen, Long Chen, Yuntong Gu, Zhiyuan Meng, Xin Bao, Xin Bao, Yuntong Gu, Hui Pan, Long Chen, Yuntong Gu, Hui Pan, Yuntong Gu, Shiran Huang, Xin Bao, Long Chen, Shiran Huang, Shiran Huang, Shiran Huang, Shiran Huang, Shiran Huang, Xin Bao, Zhiyuan Meng, Xin Bao, Long Chen, Zhiyuan Meng, Zhiyuan Meng, Long Chen, Xiaojun Chen Xiaojun Chen

Summary

This review explains how plastic mulch films used in farming break down into microplastics that can absorb and carry pesticides, making the pesticides more toxic to living organisms. The combination of microplastics and pesticides is especially concerning because microplastics can change how pesticides behave in soil, potentially increasing the amount of harmful chemicals that enter the food chain.

Plastic film mulching can maintain soil water and heat conditions, promote plant growth and thus generate considerable economic benefits in agriculture. However, as they age, these plastics degrade and form microplastics (MPs). Additionally, pesticides are widely utilized to control organisms that harm plants, and they can ultimately enter and remain in the environment after use. Pesticides can also be sorbed by MPs, and the sorption kinetics and isotherms explain the three stages of pesticide sorption: rapid sorption, slow sorption and sorption equilibrium. In this process, hydrophobic and partition interactions, electrostatic interactions and valence bond interactions are the main sorption mechanisms. Additionally, small MPs, biodegradable MPs and aged conventional MPs often exhibit stronger pesticide sorption capacity. As environmental conditions change, especially in simulated biological media, pesticides can desorb from MPs. The utilization of pesticides by environmental microorganisms is the main factor controlling the degradation rate of pesticides in the presence of MPs. Pesticide sorption by MPs and size effects of MPs on pesticides are related to the internal exposure level of biological pesticides and changes in pesticide toxicity in the presence of MPs. Most studies have suggested that MPs exacerbate the toxicological effects of pesticides on sentinel species. Hence, the environmental risks of pesticides are altered by MPs and the carrier function of MPs. Based on this, research on the affinity between MPs and various pesticides should be systematically conducted. During agricultural production, pesticides should be cautiously selected and used plastic film to ensure human health and ecological security.

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