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Plastic mulching, and occurrence, incorporation, degradation, and impacts of polyethylene microplastics in agroecosystems

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2023 97 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Huibing Hu, Huibing Hu, Liyuan Qiang, Huibing Hu, Huibing Hu, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Jiaping Wang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Huibing Hu, Huibing Hu, Jinping Cheng, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Jinping Cheng, Jinping Cheng, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Liyuan Qiang, Jinping Cheng, Jianlong Xu, Guoqiang Li, Jinping Cheng, Guoqiang Li, Jianlong Xu, Jinping Cheng, Jinping Cheng, Jinping Cheng, Jinping Cheng, Jinping Cheng, Jinping Cheng, Jinping Cheng, Huibing Hu, Jinping Cheng, Huibing Hu, Jiaping Wang, Ruoyu Zhang Ruoyu Zhang Ruoyu Zhang Ruoyu Zhang

Summary

This review examines how plastic mulch films used in agriculture break down into polyethylene microplastics and what happens to them in farm ecosystems. Researchers describe how microorganisms colonize these particles and can eventually break down the plastic molecules, but also how the microplastics alter soil microbial communities and nutrient cycling. The study highlights plastic mulching as a major source of microplastic contamination in agricultural soils worldwide.

Polymers

Polyethylene microplastics have been detected in farmland soil, irrigation water, and soil organisms in agroecosystems, while plastic mulching is suggested as a crucial source of microplastic pollution in the agroecosystem. Plastic mulch can be broken down from plastic mulch debris to microplastics through environmental aging and degradation process in farmlands, and the colonization of polyethylene-degrading microorganisms on polyethylene microplastics can eventually enzymatically depolymerize the polyethylene molecular chains with CO release through the tricarboxylic acid cycle. The selective colonization of microplastics by soil microorganisms can cause changes in soil microbial community composition, and it can consequently elicit changes in enzyme activities and nutrient element content in the soil. The biological uptake of polyethylene microplastics and the associated disturbance of energy investment are the main mechanisms impacting soil-dwelling animal development and behavior. As polyethylene microplastics are highly hydrophobic, their presence among soil particles can contribute to soil water repellency and influence soil water availability. Polyethylene microplastics have been shown to cause impacts on crop plant growth, as manifested by the effects of polyethylene microplastics on soil properties and soil biota in the agroecosystems. This review reveals the degradation process, biological impacts, and associated mechanisms of polyethylene microplastics in agroecosystems and could be a critical reference for their risk assessment and management.

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