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Effects of microplastics and carbon nanotubes on soil geochemical properties and bacterial communities

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2022 228 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Fayuan Wang, Xueying Feng, Shuwu Zhang, Yuhuan Sun, Quanlong Wang, Wenzhi Cui, Yingying Liu

Summary

In a 100-day soil experiment, researchers found that both conventional polyethylene and biodegradable polylactic acid microplastics significantly altered soil chemistry, nutrient levels, and bacterial communities. At higher concentrations, microplastics reduced nitrogen and phosphorus availability and changed the types of bacteria present, which could affect soil fertility. These findings matter because healthy soil bacteria are essential for growing the food we eat, and widespread microplastic contamination could quietly undermine agricultural productivity.

A 100-day soil incubation experiment was conducted to explore the effects of conventional (high-density polyethylene, HDPE) and biodegradable (polylactic acid, PLA) microplastics (MPs) and multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) on soil geochemical properties and bacterial communities. Generally, soil pH was increased by 10% HDPE and 10% PLA, but decreased by increasing MWCNTs. Soil dissolved organic carbon content was only increased by 10% PLA. NO-N content was significantly decreased by MPs, with a decrement of 99% by 10% PLA. Similarly, available P content was reduced by 10% MPs. The activities of urease and alkaline phosphatase were stimulated by 10% PLA, but generally inhibited by HDPE. Conversely, FDAse activity was stimulated by HDPE, but inhibited by 10% PLA, whereas invertase activity decreased with increasing MWCNTs. Overall, both MPs and MWCNTs changed soil bacterial diversity. Co-exposure to 10% MPs and MWCNTs of 1 and 10 mg/kg caused the lowest species richness and Shannon indexes. MPs especially at the 10% dose changed bacterial community composition and the associated metabolic pathways, causing the enrichment of specific taxa and functional genes. Our findings show that conventional and biodegradable MPs differently change soil geochemical properties and microbial community structure and functions, which can be further modified by co-existing MWCNTs.

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