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Iron minerals: A frontline barrier against combined toxicity of microplastics and arsenic

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2023 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Ke Cao, Hailei Su, Hailei Su, Fanfan Wang, Ningning Ji, Wensi Zhao, Shen Ya-qin, Mai Ye, Huanliang Lu, Fengchang Wu, Fengchang Wu, Wei Yuan, Xuesong Liu

Summary

Researchers investigated the interactions between microplastics, arsenic, and the iron mineral goethite in soil and their combined effects on wheat germination. They found that while microplastics reduced arsenic accumulation in wheat, the combination of both contaminants still impaired plant growth. The study suggests that goethite can serve as a frontline barrier that mitigates the combined toxicity of microplastics and arsenic in contaminated soils.

Polymers

The coexistence of microplastics (MPs) and arsenic (As) in terrestrial ecosystems presents challenges to controlling soil pollution and performing environmental risk assessments. In this study, the interactions among As, polystyrene MPs, and goethite in porous media were investigated and the individual and combined toxicities of MPs and As on wheat germination were evaluated. An additional experiment was conducted to assess the mitigating effect of goethite on the toxicity of the two contaminants. The results showed that the presence of MPs reduced As accumulation in wheat and decreased the acute lethal toxicity of As pollutants (the half-lethal concentration of As during wheat germination increased by 68.21%). However, MPs exhibited inhibitory effects on wheat germination and served as carriers to promote the migration of As within the plant body. The addition of goethite mitigated both individual and combined toxicities and further increased the half-lethal concentration for the combined pollution of As and MPs by 39.48%. This was primarily attributed to the adsorption and immobilization of arsenate and MPs on the medium and root surfaces. In our study, goethite reduced soluble As by 48.29% under the combined pollution scenarios and formed iron plaques on wheat roots, effectively obstructing pollutant entry. Thus, iron minerals serve as pioneering barriers to combined toxicity. Our findings contribute to the understanding of the combined toxicity of MPs and As in crops and offer potential strategies for managing combined pollution.

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