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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Are your shoes safe for the environment? – Toxicity screening of leachates from microplastic fragments of shoe soles using freshwater organisms

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2021 36 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.
Lia Kim, Tae-Yang Lee, Lia Kim, Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Tae-Yang Lee, Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Sang A. Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Haemi Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Tae-Yang Lee, Tae-Yang Lee, Tae-Yang Lee, Tae-Yang Lee, Tae-Yang Lee, Sang A. Kim, Sang A. Kim, Sang A. Kim, Haemi Kim, Haemi Kim, Lia Kim, Haemi Kim, Haemi Kim, Haemi Kim, Haemi Kim, Haemi Kim, Haemi Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Dokyung Kim, Lia Kim, Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Haemi Kim, Haemi Kim, Tae-Yang Lee, Tae-Yang Lee, Youn‐Joo An Dokyung Kim, Dokyung Kim, Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Lia Kim, Haemi Kim, Haemi Kim, Sang A. Kim, Sang A. Kim, Tae-Yang Lee, Tae-Yang Lee, Tae-Yang Lee, Tae-Yang Lee, Tae-Yang Lee, Haemi Kim, Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Haemi Kim, Youn‐Joo An Lia Kim, Tae-Yang Lee, Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Tae-Yang Lee, Youn‐Joo An Tae-Yang Lee, Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Tae-Yang Lee, Haemi Kim, Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An Youn‐Joo An

Summary

Researchers extracted leachates from microplastic fragments of four shoe sole types and tested toxicity against green algae, water fleas, and zebrafish larvae, finding that all shoe types released toxic chemicals — with running shoe leachates proving most harmful — raising concerns about tire and shoe rubber entering water environments.

Study Type Environmental

This study investigated the toxic effects of leachates from microplastic fragments of soles from four different types of shoes (slippers, trekking shoes, running shoes, and sneakers) on three aquatic organisms (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, Daphnia magna, and Danio rerio). The chemical components in each leachate were identified; furthermore, chlorophyll a contents of C. reinhardtii were measured, and immobilization of D. magna and deformities in D. rerio were observed. The abnormalities observed in the test species exposed to the leachates were compared and chemical compounds majorly influencing the species were determined by principal component analysis (PCA). Sneaker leachate showed growth inhibitions in C. reinhardtii, immobility and mortality in D. magna, and severe abnormalities in D. rerio. Consequently, aquatic toxicity was majorly associated with benzothiazole, carbon disulfide, ethyl acetate, and p-xylene. The results showed that toxic chemicals could leach from load-originated microplastics when exposed to aquatic media, and consequently, induce significant negative effects on aquatic organisms. Since microplastics from shoe soles discharge the above-mentioned toxic chemicals, regulating the chemical use during plastic production is critical to prevent severe effects of microplastic toxicity in aquatic organisms, and to maintain the health of aquatic environments.

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