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Non-biodegradable microplastics in soils: A brief review and challenge

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2020 203 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jiuqi Wang, Shaoliang Zhang, Shaoliang Zhang, Shaoliang Zhang, Pengke Yan, Jiuqi Wang, Shaoliang Zhang, Shaoliang Zhang, Pengke Yan, Shaoliang Zhang, Shaoliang Zhang, Pengke Yan, Shaoliang Zhang, Jiuqi Wang, Xinhua Hao, Jiuqi Wang, Jiuqi Wang, Pengke Yan, Jiuqi Wang, Shaoliang Zhang, Shaoliang Zhang, Wan Wang, Xinhua Hao, Shaoliang Zhang, Wan Wang, Xinhua Hao, Xinhua Hao, Bing Xu, Pengke Yan, Pengke Yan, Shaoliang Zhang, Pengke Yan, Jiuqi Wang, Xinhua Hao, Xinhua Hao, Xinhua Hao, Pengke Yan, Pengke Yan, Jiuqi Wang, Jiuqi Wang, Muhammad Aurangzeib Xinhua Hao, Xinhua Hao, Wan Wang, Bing Xu, Jiuqi Wang, Bing Xu, Bing Xu, Shaoliang Zhang, Xinhua Hao, Wan Wang, Jiuqi Wang, Muhammad Aurangzeib Muhammad Aurangzeib Muhammad Aurangzeib Muhammad Aurangzeib Shaoliang Zhang, Muhammad Aurangzeib Bing Xu, Muhammad Aurangzeib

Summary

This brief review examines the sources, migration, distribution, biological effects, degradation, and analytical methods for non-biodegradable microplastics in soils, where they can persist for extended periods. It highlights challenges in tracking long-term microplastic accumulation in soil ecosystems and identifies key research priorities for understanding soil microplastic behavior.

Non-biodegradable microplastics (MPs) pollution long-termly existed in soils, and was only concerned in recent years. In order to better understand MP behavior in soils, the sources, migration, distribution, biological effects, degradation and analytical methodology of non-biodegradable MPs in soils were quantificationally summarized from 170 publications based on Web of Science in 1950-2020. From the publications, we found these studies were mainly carried out in the Asia (60.0%) and Europe (23.3%), and most were on agricultural soils (68.5%). Polyethylene-MP (78.8% of the studies), Polypropylene-MP (78.8%), and Polystyrene-MP (45.5%) were the MPs most frequently found in the soils, with a MP size of 20-5000 µm being most common. Of the soil samples 64.3% contained MP 1000-4000 items kg, and the colour frequency ranking is blue (66.7%) > white (61.1%) ≈ red ≈ black. MPs changed the soil microenvironment and microorganism activity, and caused the negative effects on both soil animals (100%) and plants (57.9%). MP degradation was influenced by the photooxidation reactions, microorganism activities, enzymatic effects, environmental conditions, and by the composition, size and morphology of the MPs. An optional analytical method was suggested in this study. At the end of paper, the urgent and important research work in the future was prospected.

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