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Field studies on the deterioration of microplastic films from ultra-thin compostable bags in soil

Journal of Environmental Management 2021 41 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Cesare Accinelli, Cesare Accinelli, Cesare Accinelli, Cesare Accinelli, Cesare Accinelli, Veronica Bruno, Hamed K. Abbas, Hamed K. Abbas, Hamed K. Abbas, Veronica Bruno, Hamed K. Abbas, Veronica Bruno, Veronica Bruno, Hamed K. Abbas, W. Thomas Shier Vivek H. Khambhati, Vivek H. Khambhati, Nathan S. Little, Nathan S. Little, Nacer Bellaloui, W. Thomas Shier Nacer Bellaloui, W. Thomas Shier Nathan S. Little, W. Thomas Shier

Summary

Researchers found that ultra-thin compostable plastic bag films used for food waste collection degrade poorly in agricultural soil, with industrial compost containing undeteriorated fragments that persist after field application and raise concerns about compostable plastics as a source of soil microplastic contamination.

In recent years, some countries have replaced single-use plastic bags with bags manufactured from compostable plastic film that can be used for collecting food wastes and composted together with the waste. Because industrial compost contains undeteriorated fragments of these bags, application to field soil is a potential source of small-sized residues from these bags. This study was undertaken to examine deterioration of these compostable film microplastics (CFMPs) in field soil at three different localities in Italy. Deterioration of CFMPs did not exceed 5.7% surface area reduction during the 12-month experimental period in two sites located in Northern Italy. More deterioration was observed in the Southern site, with 7.2% surface area reduction. Deterioration was significantly increased when fields were amended with industrial compost (up to 9.6%), but not with home compost. Up to 92.9% of the recovered CFMPs were associated with the soil fungus Aspergillus flavus, with 20.1%-71.2% aflatoxin-producing isolates. Application of industrial compost resulted in a significant increase in the percentage of CFMPs associated with A. flavus. This observation provides an argument for government regulation of accumulation of CFMPs and elevation of hazardous fungi levels in agricultural soils that receive industrial compost.

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