0
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. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Remediation Sign in to save

Microplastic Addition Alters the Microbial Community Structure and Stimulates Soil Carbon Dioxide Emissions in Vegetable-Growing Soil

Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 2020 395 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.
Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Yaying Li, Bo Gao, Yaying Li, Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Huaiying Yao Yaying Li, Bo Gao, Yaying Li, Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Yaying Li, Yaying Li, Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Huaiying Yao Yizu Zhu, Yizu Zhu, Huaiying Yao Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Huaiying Yao Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Yaying Li, Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Bo Gao, Yaying Li, Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Bo Gao, Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Yaying Li, Yaying Li, Yaying Li, Bo Gao, Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Yaying Li, Yaying Li, Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Bo Gao, Yaying Li, Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao Huaiying Yao

Summary

A soil microcosm experiment found that low-density polyethylene microplastics significantly promoted CO₂ emissions from vegetable-growing soil, shifted the ratio of gram-positive to gram-negative bacteria, and altered microbial community structure in ways that could affect soil carbon cycling.

Polymers

Microplastic pollution has become an increasingly pervasive issue worldwide, but little is known about its effects on the soil environment. A soil microcosm experiment was conducted using low-density polyethylene microplastics to estimate the effect of microplastic pollution on soil nutrient cycling and the soil microbial community structure. The results showed that microplastic addition significantly promoted soil carbon dioxide emissions but not soil nitrous oxide emissions. Soil pH, dissolved organic carbon, ammonia nitrogen, the contents of total phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA), and the ratios of gram-positive bacteria to gram-negative bacteria and saturated to monounsaturated PLFAs significantly increased. In addition, nitrate nitrogen and the ratios of fungi to bacteria, total iso-branched fatty acids to total anteiso-branched fatty acids, and cyclopropyl to precursor significantly decreased with increasing microplastic addition. The addition of microplastics decreased the abundance of ammonia oxidizing bacteria and nitrite reductase (nirS) but had little effect on the functional genes of ammonia oxidizing archaea, nitrite reductase (nirK), and nitrous oxide reductase. A principal coordinate analysis of the bacterial 16S ribosomal RNA gene and fungal internal transcribed spacer in the microplastic addition treatments revealed that the bacterial and fungal communities formed an obvious cluster. The average abundance of some microbial species with tolerance and degradability to microplastics, such as Nocardioidaceae, Amycolatopsis, Aeromicrobium, Cytophagaceae, Betaproteobacteria, Rhodoplanes, and Mortierella, in the microplastic addition treatments was significantly higher than that of the control treatment. The results suggested that microplastics have obvious influences on microbial communities and may affect global carbon and nitrogen cycles. Environ Toxicol Chem 2021;40:352-365. © 2020 SETAC.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper