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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Effects of Polyethylene Microplastics and Phenanthrene on Soil Properties, Enzyme Activities and Bacterial Communities

Processes 2022 32 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Shasha Liu, Kaibo Huang, Guodong Yuan, Chengfang Yang

Summary

Researchers conducted a year-long soil microcosm experiment finding that polyethylene microplastics and phenanthrene, individually and combined, significantly altered soil pH, enzyme activities, and bacterial community diversity and function, with combined pollution showing the most pronounced effects.

Polymers

Microplastics (MPs) or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) pollution has received increasing concern due to their ubiquitous distribution and potential risks in soils. However, nothing is known about the influences of PAHs-MPs combined pollution on soil ecosystems. To address the knowledge gap, a 1-year soil microcosm experiment was conducted to systematically investigate the single and combined effect of polyethylene (PE) /phenanthrene (PHE) on soil chemical properties, enzymatic activities and bacterial communities (i.e., diversity, composition and function). Results showed that PE and PHE-PE significantly decreased soil pH. The available phosphorus (AP) and neutral phosphatase activity were not considerably changed by PHE, PE and PHE-PE. Significant enhancement of dehydrogenase activity in a PHE-PE amended system might be due to the degradation of PHE by indigenous bacteria (i.e., Sphingomonas, Sphingobium), and PE could enhance this stimulative effect. PHE and PHE-PE led to a slight increase in soil organic matter (SOM) and fluorescein diacetate hydrolase (FDAse) activity but a decrease in available nitrogen (AN) and urease activity. PE significantly enhanced the functions of nitrogen cycle and metabolism, reducing SOM/AN contents but increasing urease/FDAse activities. There were insignificant impacts on overall community diversity and composition in treated samples, although some bacterial genera were significantly stimulated or attenuated with treatments. In conclusion, the addition of PHE and PE influenced the soil chemical properties, enzymatic activities and bacterial community diversity/composition to some extent. The significantly positive effect of PE on the nitrogen cycle and on metabolic function might lead to the conspicuous alterations in SOM/AN contents and urease/FDAse activities. This study may provide new basic information for understanding the ecological risk of PAHs-MPs combined pollution in soils.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

[Effect of Microplastics and Phenanthrene on Soil Chemical Properties, Enzymatic Activities, and Microbial Communities].

A 300-day experiment tested how polyethylene and polypropylene microplastics, alone and combined with the PAH pollutant phenanthrene, affected soil chemistry, enzyme activity, and microbial communities. The results showed that microplastics and phenanthrene interacted to reshape soil microbial composition and function in ways that neither contaminant produced alone, suggesting that co-contamination by microplastics and organic pollutants poses compounded risks to soil ecosystem health.

Article Tier 2

Response of soil enzyme activities and bacterial communities to the accumulation of microplastics in an acid cropped soil

Researchers tested how polyethylene and polyvinyl chloride microplastics at different concentrations affect enzyme activity and bacterial communities in acidic agricultural soil. Both types of microplastics reduced the diversity of soil bacteria while stimulating certain enzymes related to nitrogen and phosphorus cycling. The findings suggest that microplastic accumulation in farmland may alter important soil biological processes, potentially affecting nutrient cycling and the breakdown of pollutants.

Article Tier 2

The effects of three different microplastics on enzyme activities and microbial communities in soil

Researchers added three types of microplastics (film PE, fiber PP, and sphere PP) to loamy and sandy soils and measured effects on enzyme activities and microbial communities, finding that all three types altered microbial community structure and nutrient-cycling enzyme activities in soil-type-dependent ways.

Article Tier 2

Effect of emerging contaminants on soil microbial community composition, soil enzyme activity, and strawberry plant growth in polyethylene microplastic-containing soils

Researchers found that emerging contaminants altered soil microbial community composition and enzyme activity, but these effects were suppressed when HDPE microplastics were also present in the soil, suggesting microplastics may modulate how soils respond to chemical contaminants.

Article Tier 2

Effects of microplastics and acid rain on soil chemical properties, enzyme activity, and bacterial communities

A controlled soil experiment found that conventional polyethylene and biodegradable polylactic acid microplastics both alter soil microbial communities and nutrient dynamics, with effects that change further under acid rain conditions — for example, biodegradable PLA at 2% concentration reduced bacterial diversity and shifted community composition. The results suggest that acid rain, which affects large regions of China and Europe, can amplify the soil ecosystem disruptions caused by microplastics, compounding two major environmental stressors.

Share this paper