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The joint toxicity of polyethylene microplastic and phenanthrene to wheat seedlings

Chemosphere 2021 161 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jia Wang, Jiahui Zhu, Jiahui Zhu, Shiqi Liu, Xinhua Zhan Xinhua Zhan Jiahui Zhu, Jiahui Zhu, Jiawei Wang, Shiqi Liu, Jiahui Zhu, Jiahui Zhu, Shiqi Liu, Jia Wang, Jia Wang, Jiahui Zhu, Jia Wang, Jia Wang, Jiawei Wang, Jiawei Wang, Jiawei Wang, Huiqian Wang, Jiawei Wang, Xinhua Zhan Jia Wang, Xinhua Zhan Jiawei Wang, Xinhua Zhan Xinhua Zhan Xinhua Zhan Jiawei Wang, Jiawei Wang, Jiahui Zhu, Jiawei Wang, Jiawei Wang, Xinhua Zhan Xinhua Zhan Jiawei Wang, Xinhua Zhan Xinhua Zhan Jiawei Wang, Xinhua Zhan

Summary

Researchers studied the individual and combined effects of polyethylene microplastics and the pollutant phenanthrene on wheat seedlings grown in soil. They found that microplastics alone caused dose-dependent reductions in plant growth and damaged the photosynthetic system, while the combination with phenanthrene worsened the damage. The study suggests that the co-occurrence of microplastics and organic pollutants in agricultural soils may create compounding negative effects on crop growth.

Polymers

Due to wide distribution, easy production, and difficult degradation, microplastic pollution has become a new environmental problem that has attracted worldwide attention. However, there is little information about the effects of microplastics in soil and their combined pollution with other organic pollutants on crop growth. In this study, we conducted soil culture experiments to evaluate the effects of polyethylene microplastics (PE-MPs) (0.5%, 1%, 2%, 5%, 8% w/w) individual and combined with phenanthrene (100 mg kg) on wheat growth for 15 days. Under PE-MPs alone and combined with phenanthrene exposure, dose-dependent toxicities in biomass, shoot height and root length were observed. Over 1% PE-MPs stimulate wheat root elongation. Compared with single phenanthrene treatment, the co-contamination of PE-MPs and phenanthrene reduces the accumulation of phenanthrene in wheat roots and leaves. In the range of 0-5%, the activity of wheat root antioxidant enzymes increases with increasing PE-MP concentration; but both phenanthrene and high concentrations (8%) of PE-MPs cause damage to the antioxidant system in wheat roots. In the presence or absence of phenanthrene, the photosynthetic pigment concentration of wheat leaves shows a dual concentration effect of low promotion and high inhibition under PE-MPs stress. The single pollution of PE-MPs destroys the photosynthetic system of wheat leaves, while the co-contamination of PE-MPs and phenanthrene exacerbates this destruction. Therefore, the co-contamination of PE-MPs and phenanthrene causes greater damage to wheat growth. Our findings can help to evaluate the individual and comprehensive toxicity of microplastics and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons to crops.

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