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Depth distribution of nano- and microplastics and their contribution to carbon storage in Chinese agricultural soils

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 31 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yanting Wang, Yanting Wang, Peiyu Hou, Yanting Wang, Peiyu Hou, Yanting Wang, Yanting Wang, Yanting Wang, Weiping Liu Kai Liu, Yanting Wang, Peiyu Hou, Kashif Hayat, Kashif Hayat, Weiping Liu Kashif Hayat, Kashif Hayat, Yanting Wang, Weiping Liu Weiping Liu Kashif Hayat, Kashif Hayat, Weiping Liu Weiping Liu Weiping Liu Weiping Liu Kashif Hayat, Kashif Hayat, Kashif Hayat, Kashif Hayat, Weiping Liu Weiping Liu Kashif Hayat, Kai Liu, Kashif Hayat, Weiping Liu Weiping Liu Weiping Liu

Summary

Researchers measured nano- and microplastic concentrations at different depths in Chinese agricultural soils and found that levels were highest near the surface, declining with depth. The study estimates that carbon from these plastic particles contributes between 0.004% and 5.6% to the agricultural soil carbon pool, depending on depth. These findings highlight that plastic contamination is subtly influencing soil carbon storage, though the overall contribution remains relatively low.

The extensive and prolonged utilization of plastic materials in agriculture has primarily led to the accumulation of nano- and microplastics (NMPs, ≤5 mm) in farmland soils. The spatial-vertical distribution of NMPs mass concentrations and their impact on the national agricultural soil carbon reservoir remain unexamined. In this study, we quantified the residual mass concentrations of six prevalent plastic types in farmland soils around China using the double-shot model of thermal desorption/pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (TD/Py-GC-MS). The results showed that median NMPs concentrations were 79.81 μg/g in the topsoil layer (0-15 cm), 57.17 μg/g in the middle soil layer (15-30 cm), and 32.90 μg/g in the bottom soil layer (30-45 cm). Overall, agricultural soil NMPs levels declined from the surface to deeper soil layers; however, some regions exhibit an opposite trend. Furthermore, our estimations indicate that carbon sourced from NMPs contributes to the agricultural soil carbon pool within a range from 0.004 % to 5.606 %, depending on the soil depth. As a hallmark of sustainable agricultural soil management, it is noteworthy that the concealed and continuously expanding carbon contribution of NMPs has an impact on soil carbon storage, albeit at a relatively low level. Our data serves as a foundational reference point and enables a precise evaluation of future contributions of NMPs to the storage of carbon in agricultural soils within China.

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