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Effects of Microplastics Addition on Soil Available Nitrogen in Farmland Soil

Agronomy 2022 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Weili Liu, Zhi Cao, Haiyan Ren, Dan Xi

Summary

Researchers conducted soil incubation experiments adding polyethylene microplastics at varying concentrations to farmland soil from Fujian Province, China, finding that microplastics altered soil available nitrogen dynamics by affecting nitrate, ammonium, and dissolved organic nitrogen levels as well as soil microbial communities.

Polymers

As microplastics (MPs) are an emerging pollution to farmland ecosystems, the research into the ecological and environmental effects of MPs need to be clarified urgently. Available nitrogen is the determining factor for productivity in most terrestrial ecosystems, especially for the farmland ecosystems with a high productivity. To explore the effects of MPs on soil available nitrogen in farmland soil, an incubation experiment was conducted by adding polyethylene MPs with different concentrations to farmland soil, which was collected from farmland in Fuqing, Fujian Province. The contents of three different nitrogen forms (nitrate, ammonium, and dissolved organic nitrogen) and soil dissolved organic carbon were measured, and the soil mineralization rate was calculated. Bacteria was quantified and bacterial community diversity indexes were measured. The results showed that the MPs addition (T1 and T2) had no significant effect on soil ammonium, nitrate and soil nitrogen mineralization rate compared to the control (p > 0.05). However, a significant increase was observed in soil dissolved organic carbon and dissolved organic nitrogen content (p < 0.05). It can be seen that the influence of PE MPs on the soil dissolved organic nitrogen is greater than that of inorganic nitrogen. The results of this study showed no major detrimental effects of MPs on the abundance of some bacterial families, whereas a significant change in soil bacterial evenness index was observed in T2 treatment compared to the treatment without MPs addition. In the background of current MPs pollution, the research results can provide a scientific basis for reducing nitrogen loss in soil and protecting farmland soil safety.

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