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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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Micro- and nanoplastics in soil: Linking sources to damage on soil ecosystem services in life cycle assessment

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 33 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.
Tong Li, Hongdou Liu Tong Li, Peter Fantke, Tong Li, Lizhen Cui, Lizhen Cui, Lizhen Cui, Peter Fantke, Peter Fantke, Peter Fantke, Tong Li, Zhihong Xu, Tong Li, Tong Li, Peter Fantke, Hongdou Liu Peter Fantke, Tong Li, Tong Li, Tong Li, Xiaoyong Cui, Tong Li, Tong Li, Peter Fantke, Hongdou Liu Peter Fantke, Peter Fantke, Xiaoyong Cui, Zhihong Xu, Zhihong Xu, Peter Fantke, Hongdou Liu

Summary

This review examines how micro and nanoplastics in soil damage the services that soil ecosystems provide, such as growing food, filtering water, and cycling nutrients. The plastics enter soil through wastewater, urban runoff, and breakdown of larger plastic debris, where they cause physical harm, chemical toxicity, and help other pollutants accumulate in organisms. The authors propose a framework for measuring this damage, which could help policymakers understand the true environmental cost of plastic pollution.

Study Type Environmental

Soil ecosystems are crucial for providing vital ecosystem services (ES), and are increasingly pressured by the intensification and expansion of human activities, leading to potentially harmful consequences for their related ES provision. Micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs), associated with releases from various human activities, have become prevalent in various soil ecosystems and pose a global threat. Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), a tool for evaluating environmental performance of product and technology life cycles, has yet to adequately include MNPs-related damage to soil ES, owing to factors like uncertainties in MNPs environmental fate and ecotoxicological effects, and characterizing related damage on soil species loss, functional diversity, and ES. This study aims to address this gap by providing as a first step an overview of the current understanding of MNPs in soil ecosystems and proposing a conceptual approach to link MNPs impacts to soil ES damage. We find that MNPs pervade soil ecosystems worldwide, introduced through various pathways, including wastewater discharge, urban runoff, atmospheric deposition, and degradation of larger plastic debris. MNPs can inflict a range of ecotoxicity effects on soil species, including physical harm, chemical toxicity, and pollutants bioaccumulation. Methods to translate these impacts into damage on ES are under development and typically focus on discrete, yet not fully integrated aspects along the impact-to-damage pathway. We propose a conceptual framework for linking different MNPs effects on soil organisms to damage on soil species loss, functional diversity loss and loss of ES, and elaborate on each link. Proposed underlying approaches include the Threshold Indicator Taxa Analysis (TITAN) for translating ecotoxicological effects associated with MNPs into quantitative measures of soil species diversity damage; trait-based approaches for linking soil species loss to functional diversity loss; and ecological networks and Bayesian Belief Networks for linking functional diversity loss to soil ES damage. With the proposed conceptual framework, our study constitutes a starting point for including the characterization of MNPs-related damage on soil ES in LCA.

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