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Studies on the transfer effect of aged polyethylene microplastics in soil-plant system

Chemosphere 2023 38 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.
Shuo Yang, Ying Zhang, Shengyan Pu Shengyan Pu Ying Zhang, Ying Zhang, Shuo Yang, Shuo Yang, Yi Chen, Yuping Zeng, Yuping Zeng, Yi Chen, Xinyao Yan, Shuo Yang, Shuo Yang, Ying Zhang, Shengyan Pu Shengyan Pu Yi Chen, Xinyao Yan, Xiao Tang, Xinyao Yan, Ying Zhang, Xinyao Yan, Shengyan Pu Shengyan Pu Shengyan Pu

Summary

Researchers studied how aged and unaged polyethylene microplastics move through soil-plant systems using maize as a model crop. They confirmed that micrometer-sized particles (26 micrometers) can be transported within plant tissues from roots to stems and leaves, expanding the known upper size limit for microplastic uptake in plants. The study quantitatively assessed microplastic accumulation at each transfer point, finding that aging of the plastic particles affected their ecological interactions in the soil.

Polymers

The widespread use of polyethylene (PE) agricultural films has led to a large accumulation of microplastics in soil, and the environmental effects of microplastics on soil-plants have received increasing attention. In the actual soil environment, microplastics undergo significant changes in their physicochemical properties due to aging, accompanied by complex ecological and environmental effects. However, the quantitative understanding of the environmental effects of microplastic aging in soil-plant systems is still unclear. Therefore, this study investigated the effects of aged and unaged PE microplastics on ecological functions and microplastic transfer mechanisms in soil-plant system, and confirmed the transport behavior of micrometer-sized microplastics (26 μm) within maize plants, expanding the upper size limit of existing studies on microplastic transport within plants. The accumulation of microplastics in maize was also quantitatively assessed in combination with the self-established method of Eu marked PE. The mobility ratio of microplastics from soil to roots, roots to stems, and stems to leaves was 1.07%, 0.76%, and 103.28%, respectively. This study provides a scientific understanding for the environmental effects of microplastics in soil-plants systems quantitatively.

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