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Exposure of microplastics to organic matter in waters enhances microplastic encapsulation into calcium carbonate

Environmental Chemistry Letters 2022 28 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Nives Matijaković Mlinarić, Atiđa Selmani, Antun Lovro Brkić, Branka Njegić Džakula, Damir Kralj, Jasminka Kontrec

Summary

Laboratory experiments showed that exposure of polystyrene microspheres to humic acids—a common component of dissolved organic matter in natural waters—enabled approximately 5% of the microspheres to become encapsulated within calcite crystals during calcium carbonate precipitation. This mechanism means microplastics can be incorporated into the shells, skeletons, and hard tissues of marine calcifiers like molluscs, corals, and crustaceans, potentially compromising skeletal integrity and entering the food chain via shell-forming organisms.

Polymers

Plastic pollution in water ecosystems is threatening the survival of wildlife. In particular, microplastics may be encapsulated into calcium carbonate, a crucial building block of hard tissue in many species such as molluscs, corals, phytoplankton, sponges, echinoderms, and crustaceans. Actually little is known on the effect of humic acids, a common component of dissolved organic matter, on the encapsulation of microplastic into calcium carbonate. Here, we precipitated calcium carbonate with humic acids and polystyrene microspheres. The precipitation process was followed by measuring pH during the reaction. Composition, structure, morphology, surface properties and microspheres encapsulation extent were analysed by infrared spectroscopy, X-ray powder diffraction, atomic force microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, total organic carbon analysis, thermogravimetric analysis, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, electrophoretic and dynamic light scattering. Results show, for the first time, that encapsulation of polystyrene microspheres into calcite crystals occurs only after the treatment of the microspheres with humic acids, leading to encapsulation of about 5% of the initial microspheres mass. On the contrary, untreated microspheres did not encapsulate in calcium carbonate. Our findings imply that exposure of microplastics to dissolved organic matter in water ecosystems could result in enhanced encapsulation into the exoskeleton and endoskeleton of aquatic organisms.

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