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Divergent responses of soil nematode communities to conventional and oxidized polyethylene microplastics and their mitigation by sawdust amendment in a floodplain agricultural field

The Science of The Total Environment 2025
Zhongjie Sun, Yaxuan Cui, Haibo Liu, Yan He, Y. L. Xiao, Luzhen Wang, Wei Duan, Xinyue Wu, Feirong Ren, Jun Zheng

Summary

Researchers found that oxidized polyethylene microplastics caused greater harm to soil nematode communities than conventional LDPE microplastics in Yellow River Basin agricultural soil, reducing nematode abundance by 38.22%, genus richness by 25.72%, and maturity index by 11.54%, while sawdust amendment effectively mitigated these adverse effects.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastic (MP) pollution in agricultural soils poses a growing threat to soil biodiversity and ecosystem functionality. However, the ecological impacts of polyethylene MPs at various stages of environmental aging-particularly the differences between conventional and oxidized forms-are not yet fully understood. This study examined the effects of conventional low-density polyethylene microplastics (LDPE-MPs) and oxidized polyethylene microplastics (OLDPE-MPs), in conjunction with sawdust amendment, on soil nematode communities in a typical alluvial Entisol from the Yellow River Basin throughout the peanut growth cycle. The results demonstrated that MP type significantly influenced nematode community dynamics, with OLDPE-MPs causing more substantial reductions in nematode abundance (38.22 %), genus richness (25.72 %), and maturity index (11.54 %) compared to LDPE-MPs. OLDPE-MPs were associated with trophic-level-specific responses, particularly affecting bacterivorous nematodes. The addition of sawdust effectively mitigated these adverse effects by enhancing soil physicochemical properties, reducing the negative impacts of LDPE-MPs and OLDPE-MPs on Shannon diversity by 8.98 % and 8.79 %, respectively. These findings underscore that environmental aging processes play a critical role in determining the ecological consequences of microplastics and highlight the potential of organic amendments in enhancing soil ecosystem resilience. This study offers both mechanistic insights into microplastic-soil interactions and practical strategies for mitigating microplastic pollution in agricultural environments.

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