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Accumulation of HOCs via Precontaminated Microplastics by Earthworm <i>Eisenia fetida</i> in Soil

Environmental Science & Technology 2020 75 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jie Wang Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Daniel Schlenk, Daniel Schlenk, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Daniel Schlenk, Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jay Gan, Daniel Schlenk, Daniel Schlenk, Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jay Gan, Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jay Gan, Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Jie Wang Jay Gan, Jie Wang Jie Wang Jay Gan, Scott Coffin, Jie Wang Jay Gan, Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Jie Wang Jie Wang Jie Wang

Summary

Researchers incubated earthworms in soil amended with five types of microplastics precontaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons to assess whether pre-contaminated MPs enhance HOC transfer to terrestrial organisms. Results showed that precontaminated microplastics significantly increased earthworm accumulation of PCBs and PAHs compared to controls, demonstrating that the contamination history of MPs entering soil is a critical but overlooked factor in risk assessment.

Soil is a primary sink for plastics, but the influence of microplastics as carriers on terrestrial cycling of persistent contaminants is poorly understood as compared to aquatic systems. Studies to date have disregarded the potential fact that microplastics are generally contaminated before their entry into soil. In this study, earthworm <i>Eisenia fetida</i> was incubated for 28 d in a soil amended with five common types of microplastics precontaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) to elucidate contaminant transfer. Accumulation of HOCs in <i>E. fetida</i> varied greatly among different plastic types and HOCs. The freely dissolved concentration (<i>C</i><sub>free</sub>) of HOCs showed that desorption of HOCs from microplastics into soil was closely related to plastic types and HOC hydrophobicity and was much slower for polystyrene or polypropylene than polyethylene. Biodynamic model analysis suggested that ingestion of microplastics could act as a significant pathway for some microplastics, likely due to HOCs on the plastics being in an "over-equilibrium" state. This was in contrast with mixing clean microplastics into HOC-contaminated soil, where the microplastics decreased bioaccumulation. Therefore, whether microplastics serve as facilitators or inhibitors of HOC bioaccumulation depends on the fugacity gradient of HOCs between microplastics and soil, which highlights the importance of considering the sequence of contamination between the plastics and soil. These findings also question the validity of short-term experiments because of the generally very slow partition kinetics of HOCs on plastics.

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