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Effects of nanopolystyrene addition on nitrogen fertilizer fate, gaseous loss of N from the soil, and soil microbial community composition
Summary
Researchers found that nanopolystyrene particles added to agricultural soil disrupted nitrogen cycling by altering microbial community composition and increasing gaseous nitrogen losses, potentially reducing fertilizer efficiency and contributing to greenhouse gas emissions in agroecosystems.
Nanoplastics and microplastics are the degradation products of plastics waste and have become a dominant pollutant in the environment. However, little is known about the ecological impacts of nanoplastic particles in the agroecosystem. We conducted a mesocosm experiment to examine nanopolystyrene effects on fertilizer nitrogen (N) fate, N gaseous losses and soil microbial communities using Chinese cabbage (Brassica Campestris ssp.) as the model plant. The two-factorial experiment was designed as the addition of N-labeled urea exposed without and with ~50 nm nanopolystyrene (0, 0.05%, and 0.1%). Nanopolystyrene addition had a detectable effect on soil mineral N content. The N uptake of plants was reduced in aboveground biomass but enhanced in roots with increasing nanopolystyrene concentration. Nanopolystyrene addition decreased soil nitrous oxide and ammonia emissions by 27% and 37%, respectively. Nanopolystyrene addition consistently reduced the abundance of ammonia oxidizer genes but showed contrasting effects on denitrifying genes. Metagenomic sequencing data revealed no significant effects of nanopolystyrene on the N-cycle pathway, while it significantly altered the composition of bacterial and fungal communities. This study provided the first insights into the nanopolystyrene induced linkage of root growth with more root N uptake and less gaseous N losses and the associated changes in the microbial community.
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