0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Gut & Microbiome Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Earthworms Exposed to Polyethylene and Biodegradable Microplastics in Soil: Microplastic Characterization and Microbial Community Analysis

ACS Agricultural Science & Technology 2023 42 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.
Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Douglas G. Hayes, Kaushik Adhikari, Anton F. Astner, Anton F. Astner, Anton F. Astner, Anton F. Astner, Anton F. Astner, Anton F. Astner, Anton F. Astner, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Markus Flury, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Kaushik Adhikari, Kaushik Adhikari, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Yingxue Yu, Markus Flury, Kaushik Adhikari, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Douglas G. Hayes, Douglas G. Hayes, Douglas G. Hayes, Douglas G. Hayes, Douglas G. Hayes, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Yingxue Yu, Anton F. Astner, Anton F. Astner, Jennifer M. DeBruyn, Yingxue Yu, Douglas G. Hayes, Douglas G. Hayes, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Anton F. Astner, Markus Flury, Yingxue Yu, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Jennifer M. DeBruyn, Jennifer M. DeBruyn, Douglas G. Hayes, Markus Flury, Douglas G. Hayes, Douglas G. Hayes, Markus Flury, Jennifer M. DeBruyn, Jennifer M. DeBruyn, Yingxue Yu, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Anton F. Astner, Douglas G. Hayes, Markus Flury, Douglas G. Hayes, Jennifer M. DeBruyn, Douglas G. Hayes, Douglas G. Hayes, Brian O'callahan Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Douglas G. Hayes, Douglas G. Hayes, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Markus Flury, Brian O'callahan Brian O'callahan

Summary

Researchers exposed earthworms to biodegradable and conventional polyethylene microplastics in natural soil and found that worms ingested both types. The biodegradable plastic showed signs of partial breakdown in the earthworm gut, while conventional polyethylene remained unchanged. Although microplastics did not significantly alter the soil or gut microbiome in this study, the results confirm that earthworms transport microplastics through soil ecosystems.

While much is known about microplastics in aquatic environments, only few studies have focused on how microplastics interact with terrestrial organisms. The objective of our study was to investigate the interactions of earthworms with microplastics in a natural environment with environmentally realistic plastic concentrations. We investigated whether earthworms would ingest microplastics and incorporate them into their bodies and cast, and whether microplastics would alter the intestinal and soil microbiome. Lumbricus terrestris was exposed to two types of microplastics, biodegradable polybutylene adipate terephthalate (PBAT) and low-density polyethylene (LDPE) in mesocosoms filled with natural soil. Microplastics were mixed with poplar leaves, and earthworms were allowed to forage for food for 20 days. Surface and bulk soil, earthworm’s cast, and earthworms themselves were sampled and analyzed for plastic content and microbial communities. Earthworms did not show macroscopic health deterioration (weight loss, vitality). We observed microplastics particles in earthworm casts and guts. Raman spectroscopy indicated that PBAT in guts and cast had degraded to some extent; however, LDPE remained unchanged among the different samples. Microbial analysis showed that soil and casts has similar microbial communities; however, they were significantly different from the gut samples. Microplastic treatments did not result in a statistically significant change in bacterial richness, diversity, or community composition for soil, casts, or guts compared to controls. Taken together, our results suggest that, at environmentally realistic concentrations and short exposure times, PBAT and LDPE microplastics do not have adverse effects on Lumbricus terrestris earthworms.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper