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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Can “Risk-Sharing” Mechanisms Help Clonal Aquatic Plants Mitigate the Stress of Nanoplastics?

Environmental Science & Technology 2024 18 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Wenke Yuan, Nan Shen, Hongwei Yu, Jiuhui Qu Jiuhui Qu Wenke Yuan, Huawei Jia, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan, Wenke Yuan, Wenke Yuan, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan, Wenke Yuan, Huawei Jia, Hongwei Yu, Hongwei Yu, Hongwei Yu, Hongwei Yu, Hongwei Yu, Hongwei Yu, Wenke Yuan, Nan Shen, Huawei Jia, Hongwei Yu, Wenke Yuan, Wenke Yuan, Wenke Yuan, Hongwei Yu, Huawei Jia, Yuyi Yang, Hongwei Yu, Wenke Yuan, Hongwei Yu, Nan Shen, Huawei Jia, Hongwei Yu, Nan Shen, Yuyi Yang, Nan Shen, Huawei Jia, Diga Gang, Chengzhi Hu, Chengzhi Hu, Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan, Hongwei Yu, Wenke Yuan, Chengzhi Hu, Yuyi Yang, Diga Gang, Hongwei Yu, Diga Gang, Chengzhi Hu, Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan, Wenke Yuan, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan, Wenke Yuan, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Hongwei Yu, Hongwei Yu, Jiuhui Qu Jiuhui Qu Jiuhui Qu Nan Shen, Jiuhui Qu Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Chengzhi Hu, Yuyi Yang, Jiuhui Qu Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Jiuhui Qu Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Hongwei Yu, Yuyi Yang, Jiuhui Qu Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Chengzhi Hu, Jiuhui Qu Yuyi Yang, Yuyi Yang, Nan Shen, Yuyi Yang, Jiuhui Qu Yuyi Yang, Jiuhui Qu Jiuhui Qu Chengzhi Hu, Chengzhi Hu, Jiuhui Qu Yuyi Yang, Jiuhui Qu Chengzhi Hu, Yuyi Yang, Jiuhui Qu Jiuhui Qu Jiuhui Qu Jiuhui Qu Yuyi Yang, Jiuhui Qu Jiuhui Qu Wenke Yuan, Jiuhui Qu Yuyi Yang, Wenke Yuan, Chengzhi Hu, Jiuhui Qu

Summary

This study examined how nanoplastics affect water hyacinth, a clonal aquatic plant that can share resources between connected parent and offspring plants. Nanoplastics accumulated in parent plants and transferred to offspring through connecting stems, reducing growth and damaging the photosynthetic system at all tested concentrations. The findings are concerning because aquatic plants used in ecological restoration could accumulate and spread nanoplastic contamination through water ecosystems.

Polymers

Most aquatic plants applied to ecological restoration have demonstrated a clonal growth pattern. The risk-spreading strategy plays a crucial role in facilitating clonal plant growth under external environmental stresses via clonal integration. However, the effects of different concentrations of nanoplastics (NPs) on the growth traits of clonal aquatic plants are not well understood. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the impact of NPs exposure on seedlings of parent plants and connected offspring ramets. A dose response experiment (0.1, 1, and 10 mg L<sup>-1</sup>) showed that the growth of <i>Eichhornia crassipes</i> (water hyacinth) was affected by 100 nm polystyrene nanoplastics after 28 days of exposure. Tracer analysis revealed that NPs are accumulated by parent plants and transferred to offspring ramets through stolon. Quantification analysis showed that when the parent plant was exposed to 10 mg L<sup>-1</sup> NPs alone for 28 days, the offspring ramets contained approximately 13 ± 2 μg/g NPs. In the case of connected offspring ramets, leaf and root biomass decreased by 24%-51% and 32%-51%, respectively, when exposed to NP concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 10 mg L<sup>-1</sup>. Excessive enrichment of NPs had a detrimental effect on the photosynthetic system, decreasing the chlorophyll content and nonphotochemical quenching. An imbalance in the antioxidant defense systems, which were unable to cope with the oxidative stress caused by NP concentrations, further damaged various organs. The root system can take up NPs and then transfer them to the offspring through the stolon. Interference effects of NPs were observed in terms of root activity, metabolism, biofilm composition, and the plant's ability to purify water. However, the risk-spreading strategy employed by parent plants (interconnected offspring ramets) offered some relief from NP-induced stress, as it increased their relative growth rate by 1 to 1.38 times compared to individual plants. These findings provide substantial evidence of the high NP enrichment capacity of <i>E. crassipes</i> for ecological remediation. Nevertheless, we must also remain aware of the environmental risk associated with the spread of NPs within the clonal system of <i>E. crassipes</i>, and contaminated cloned individuals need to be precisely removed in a timely manner to maintain normal functions.

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