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Effects of agricultural land types on microplastic abundance: A nationwide meta-analysis in China

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 24 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Lijuan Liu, Zhaowei Wang, Yuping Ye, Kemin Qi

Summary

Meta-analysis of 321 observations across Chinese agricultural soils found that vegetable-growing soils had the highest microplastic contamination, followed by orchards, cropland, and grassland. Agricultural film mulch significantly increased soil microplastic levels, especially in orchards, while higher population density and economic activity correlated with increased contamination across all land types.

Study Type Review

Microplastics (MPs) accumulation in agricultural land that possibly poses threats to food security and human health has recently attracted increasing attention. Land use type probably is a key factor that drives the contamination level of soil MPs. Nevertheless, few studies have performed large-scale systematic analysis of the effects in different agricultural land soils on the MPs abundance. In this study, we constructed a national MPs dataset comprising 321 observations from 28 articles, summarised the current status of microplastic pollution in five agricultural land types in China through meta-analysis, and investigated the effects and key factors of agricultural land types on microplastic abundance. The results showed that among the existing soil microplastic research, vegetable soils maintained a higher environmental exposure distribution than other agricultural lands, and with the most common trend being vegetable land > orchard land > cropland > grassland. By combining agricultural practices, demographic economic factors and geographical factors, a potential impact identification method based on subgroup analysis was established. The findings demonstrated that agricultural film mulch significantly increased soil MPs abundance, especially in orchards. Increased population and economy (carbon emissions and PM concentrations) add MPs abundance in all kinds of agricultural lands. And the significant changes of effect sizes in high-latitude and mid-altitude areas suggested that geographical space differences exerted a certain degree of impact on the soil distribution of MPs. By the proposed method, different levels of MPs risk areas in agricultural soils can be more reasonably and effectively identified, which will provide type-specific policies technical and theoretical support for the precise management of MPs in agricultural land soils.

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