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Meta Analysis ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 1 ? Systematic review or meta-analysis. Synthesizes findings across many studies. Strongest evidence. Environmental Sources Sign in to save

Meta-analysis reveals differential impacts of microplastics on soil biota

Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 2022 72 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.
Ziqiang Liu, Ziqiang Liu, Ziqiang Liu, Ziqiang Liu, Ziqiang Liu, Ziqiang Liu, Hui Wei, Jiefen Xie, Xuan Chen, Xuan Chen, Jiefen Xie, Li‐Zhu Wu, Li‐Zhu Wu, Ziqiang Liu, Ziqiang Liu, Muhammad Saleem, Jiaen Zhang Hui Wei, Ziqiang Liu, Li‐Zhu Wu, Xuan Chen, Xuan Chen, Ziqiang Liu, Li‐Zhu Wu, Xuan Chen, Jiaen Zhang Jiaen Zhang Jiaen Zhang Jiaen Zhang Jiaen Zhang Jiaen Zhang Jiefen Xie, Jiaen Zhang Hui Wei, Hui Wei, Hui Wei, Hui Wei, Li‐Zhu Wu, Hui Wei, Jiefen Xie, Ziqiang Liu, Xuan Chen, Jiefen Xie, Jiefen Xie, Ziqiang Liu, Ziqiang Liu, Ziqiang Liu, Jiaen Zhang Jiaen Zhang Ziqiang Liu, Hui Wei, Jiaen Zhang Jiaen Zhang Jiaen Zhang Hui Wei, Jiaen Zhang Li‐Zhu Wu, Hui Wei, Jiaen Zhang

Summary

Soil microplastic contamination ranged from 0.34 to over 410,000 items/kg across sites, and their presence significantly increased mortality rates and decreased individual numbers, diversity, and reproduction of soil organisms, though biomass was unaffected due to opposing effects on different organism groups.

Body Systems
Study Type Review

Contamination of microplastics (MPs) is a global environmental issue that has received much attention from the scientific and public communities due to ecological concerns in recent decades. Comparing with aquatic ecosystems, soil systems, regardless of the high importance and complexity, have been less studied under widely existing and increasing MP contamination. This review, combined with data assimilation and meta-analysis methods, has summarized current contamination conditions of soil MPs across different sites reported in earlier studies. While performing this meta-analysis, we investigated the effects of MPs on soil biota including their numbers, biomass, diversity, and physiological properties. The results showed that abundance of soil MPs ranged from 0.34 to 410958.9 items kg and concentration ranged from 0.002 to 67500 mg kg across sites, with agricultural soils containing significantly lower abundance and concentration of MPs than others. Presence of MPs significantly decreased the individual number of soil biota, operational taxonomic unit, diversity index (Simpson), movement index and reproduction rate, whereas the mortality rate was significantly increased by the soil MPs. Despite these significant effects, MPs did not significantly alter the biomass of soil biota, which could be due to a counteraction of their negative and positive effects on different groups of soil organisms. Moreover, we observed that soil MPs could significantly increase the Chao1 index, suggesting that MPs may act as a food resource for the soil rare biosphere. Based on the existing knowledge, we suggest that future studies should focus on research areas that include but are not limited to methodological improvements, intensive field investigations, risk assessment from the perspective of soil food web and bioaccumulation, MPs induced antibiotic resistance, and restoration strategies to reduce their concentrations in soil.

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