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Contribution of mulch film to microplastics in agricultural soil and surface water in China

Environmental Pollution 2021 119 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Shu-Yan Ren, Sifang Kong, Hong‐Gang Ni

Summary

Researchers developed a framework to quantify how much agricultural mulch film contributes to microplastic contamination in farmland soil and surface water in China, measuring the ratio of mulch-derived particles to total microplastics from all sources.

Study Type Environmental

Agricultural mulch film (AMF) is deemed an important source of microplastics (MPs) in agricultural soil (AS). However, quantitating the contribution of AMFs to MPs in farmland soil and surface water remains a considerable challenge to date. In the present study, a basic framework was developed to address these concerns. First, the concentrations of MPs in soil derived from AMF abrasion (C) and the total MPs from all sources in AS (C) were measured. Then, the ratios of C to C, i.e., the contribution of AMFs to MPs in AS, were calculated. The contribution of AMFs to MPs in surface water via soil erosion was calculated based on C values, the ratios of C to C, soil erosion intensities (SEIs), and farmland areas. Furthermore, the potential contribution of soil erosion to MPs in the ocean was estimated. In China, the inventory of MPs in surface AS in 2018 ranged from 4.9 × 10 to 1.0 × 10 tons according to our results. AMFs contributed 10%-30% of the C with certainties of 60-95%. Assuming that all MPs in AS can be exhaustively transferred to surface water via soil erosion, the national mass transfer amount of MPs (MT) from AS to surface water reached 1.2 × 10-2.2 × 10 tons (∼2% of the inventory of MPs in the AS of China); the fluxes of MPs into the ocean from AS were 3.4 × 10-6.6 × 10 tons, assuming that all MPs in the AS of coastal provinces enter the ocean. It is likely that AMFs contributed 10%-30% MT and fluxes of MPs to the ocean according to the ratios of C to C. Apparently, approximately 30% of the national MT (i.e., the rate of MP flux to the ocean to MT) was input to the ocean.

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