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Earthworm activity effectively mitigated the negative impact of microplastics on maize growth

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2023 29 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.
Yanpei Li, Jiao Wang, Jiao Wang, Jiao Wang, Jiao Wang, Jiao Wang, Yanpei Li, Jiao Wang, Jiao Wang, Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Mingan Shao, Jiao Wang, Jiao Wang, Jiao Wang, Mingan Shao, Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Jiao Wang, Jiao Wang, Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Jiao Wang, Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Mingan Shao, Jiao Wang, Hanzhong Jia Mingan Shao, Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia Hanzhong Jia

Summary

Researchers investigated whether earthworms could help reduce the harmful effects of microplastic contamination on soil and crop growth. They found that earthworm activity increased soil nutrient content, boosted microbial diversity, and promoted maize growth even in microplastic-polluted soil. The study suggests that earthworms may serve as a natural tool for managing agricultural soils contaminated with plastic particles.

Microplastic pollution can have detrimental effects on soil environments and inhibit crop growth. Earthworms, known as soil engineers, promote crop growth, but their role and impact on the amelioration of microplastic-polluted soil is not yet clear. In this study, we investigated the impact and pathways of earthworm activity on microplastic-contaminated soil by introducing varying densities (without earthworm:0, low-density: 1, medium-density: 2, high-density: 5 ind column) of earthworms (epi-endogeic) into soil contaminated with two types of microplastics: polyethylene and polyvinyl chloride. Our results showed that earthworms all survived in soil polluted with two types of microplastics. Meanwhile, earthworm activity increased nutrient content and enzyme activity by 0.2-36.1% and 2.9-34.3%, respectively, and significantly increased soil microbial biomass and community diversity index. Earthworm activity also decreased antioxidant enzyme activity and promoted maize plant growth, including agronomic traits such as plant height, biomass, root length, and root surface area. Furthermore, the nutrient content of maize organs increased by 1.1-29.7%. Partial least squares models confirmed that earthworm activity alleviated the stress effect of microplastic pollution on plant growth by improving soil structure, fertility, and microbial abundance and diversity. The greatest effect on maize growth was observed with the improvement of soil physical-chemical properties. Our results suggest that medium densities of earthworms have the greatest soil improvement effect and provide an important basis for bioremediation of farmland contaminated by microplastics and promoting green and efficient development in agriculture.

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