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Analysis of microplastics in soils on the high-altitude area of the Tibetan Plateau: Multiple environmental factors

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 52 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sansan Feng, Sansan Feng, Hongwei Lu, Hongwei Lu, Tianci Yao, Meng Tang, Chuang Yin

Summary

Researchers analyzed microplastic contamination in soils across different land use types on the high-altitude Tibetan Plateau, a remote and sparsely populated region. The study found that microplastic abundance varied with land use, altitude, meteorological conditions, and distance from roads, with greenhouse soils showing the highest concentrations, indicating that even remote high-altitude environments are not free from microplastic pollution.

Microplastics (MPs), a class of emerging contaminants, are ubiquitous in the environment, but limited information is known about them in remote terrestrial environment at high-altitude areas with inconvenient traffic and sparsely populated. In this study, 54 soil samples were collected from various land use patterns (greenhouse, ordinary farmland, grassland, and bare land) in western area of the Tibetan Plateau to determine the influence of land use type, altitude, meteorological parameters, and distance from the road edge on MP distribution. The MP abundance ranged from 0 (not detected) to 190 items/kg, with an average number of 64.8 items/kg. The concentration of MPs was slightly negatively correlated with altitude because of less human activities in high-altitude areas (especially agricultural activities). The random forest (RF) models showed that altitude was the most important driving factor that affected the MP distribution. Small-sized MPs were more abundant at higher altitudes than at low ones, and the special natural environment of the high-altitude areas (tall vegetation scarcely, UV, and strong wind speed) may be conducive to the degradation of MPs in surface soils. The special source of MPs in non-agricultural soils was associated with traffic behavior: parking and rest behavior beside roads at high altitude areas, which filled an important source of MPs in the plateau area. This study emphasized the need to investigate the effects of traffic activities on MPs in remote areas at high altitudes.

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