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Ecological risks of microplastics contamination with green solutions and future perspectives

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 49 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.
Ze‐Ying Zhao, Jaya Nepal, Ze‐Ying Zhao, Ze‐Ying Zhao, Wei Zhang, Aziz Khan, Wei Zhang, Peng-Yang Wang, Wei Zhang, Ze‐Ying Zhao, Ze‐Ying Zhao, Wei Zhang, Ze‐Ying Zhao, Peng-Yang Wang, Peng-Yang Wang, Peng-Yang Wang, Wiqar Ahmad, Jie Zheng, Peng-Yang Wang, Peng-Yang Wang, Wei Zhang, Ze‐Ying Zhao, Peng-Yang Wang, Peng-Yang Wang, Peng-Yang Wang, Peng-Yang Wang, Jing Wang, Wei Zhang, Ze‐Ying Zhao, Ze‐Ying Zhao, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Aziz Khan, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Jaya Nepal, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Najeeb Ullah, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Ze‐Ying Zhao, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Adnan Khan, Aziz Khan, Wei Zhang, Peng-Yang Wang, Adnan Khan, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Wei Zhang, Peng-Yang Wang, You‐Cai Xiong Wiqar Ahmad, Wei Zhang, You‐Cai Xiong Adnan Khan, Adnan Khan, You‐Cai Xiong You‐Cai Xiong You‐Cai Xiong Wei Wang, You‐Cai Xiong You‐Cai Xiong Mengying Li, Wei Zhang, You‐Cai Xiong Aziz Khan, Mohammad Soliman Elsheikh, Mohammad Soliman Elsheikh, You‐Cai Xiong You‐Cai Xiong You‐Cai Xiong You‐Cai Xiong You‐Cai Xiong You‐Cai Xiong

Summary

This review covers the ecological risks of microplastic contamination in farmland, particularly from plastic mulch films used in agriculture. Microplastics in soil affect water retention, nutrient cycling, microbial communities, and even greenhouse gas emissions. The authors discuss green solutions like biodegradable alternatives and soil remediation techniques that could reduce microplastic buildup in the food production system.

Polymers
Body Systems

The rise of plasticulture as mulching material in farming systems has raised concerns about microplastics (MPs) in the agricultural landscape. MPs are emerging pollutants in croplands and water systems with significant ecological risks, particularly over the long term. In the soil systems, MPs polymer type, thinness, shape, and size induces numerous effects on soil aggregates, dissolved organic carbon (C), rapidly oxidized organic C, microbial biomass C, microbial biomass nitrogen (N), microbial immobilization, degradation of organic matter, N cycling, and production of greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs), thereby posing a significant risk of impairing soil physical and biochemical properties over time. Further, toxic chemicals released from polyethylene mulching (PMs) might indirectly harm plant growth by affecting soil wetting-drying cycles, releasing toxic substances that interact with soil matrix, and suppressing soil microbial activity. In the environment, accumulation of MPs poses a risk to human health by accelerating emissions of GHGs, e.g., methane and carbon dioxide, or directly releasing toxic substances such as phthalic acid esters (PAEs) into the soils. Also, larger sizes MPs can adhere to root surface and block stomata could significantly change the shape of root epidermal cells resulting in arrest plant growth and development by restricting water-nutrient uptake, and gene expression and altering the biodiversity of the soil pollutants. In this review, we systematically analyzed the potential risks of MPs to the soil-plant and human body, their occurrence, abundance, and migration in agroecosystems. Further, the impacts of MPs on soil microbial function, nutrient cycling, soil C, and GHGs are mechanistically reviewed, with emphasis on potential green solutions such as organic materials amendments along with future research directions for more eco-friendly and sustainable plastic management in agroecosystems.

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