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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. Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

The influence of polyethylene microplastics on pesticide residue and degradation in the aquatic environment

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2020 164 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.
Fang Wang, Fang Wang, Donghui Liu Jing Gao, Fang Wang, Fang Wang, Wangjing Zhai, Peng Wang, Wangjing Zhai, Wangjing Zhai, Wangjing Zhai, Wangjing Zhai, Wangjing Zhai, Peng Wang, Donghui Liu Zhiqiang Zhou, Peng Wang, Peng Wang, Fang Wang, Fang Wang, Zhiqiang Zhou, Zhiqiang Zhou, Peng Wang, Zhiqiang Zhou, Zhiqiang Zhou, Donghui Liu Zhiqiang Zhou, Peng Wang, Donghui Liu

Summary

Polyethylene microplastics significantly prolonged the degradation half-lives of pesticides in water, particularly those with moderate initial degradation rates, by adsorbing the chemicals and slowing their breakdown. For the pesticide terbuthylazine, the half-life increased from 32 to 45 days in the presence of microplastics, with implications for how long agricultural chemicals persist after microplastics carry them into water bodies.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics pollution has become a global concern in recent years. In this work, the potential influences of polyethylene (PE) microplastics on the residue, degradation and distribution behaviors of eight pesticides (epoxiconazole, tebuconazole, myclobutanil, azoxystrobin, simazine, terbuthylazine, atrazine and metolachlor) in the aquatic environment were investigated. The results showed that the presence of 2-50 g L microplastics could decrease the pesticide residues in water. The adsorption isotherms were linear, indicating the process was dominated by partitioning into the bulk polymer. The desorption kinetics data implied the desorption process obeyed a pseudo-second-order kinetic model, with R above 0.99 in most cases. Aging treatment of microplastics had no significant effects on the interaction with the pesticides. The presence of PE microplastics could significantly prolong the degradation half-lives of pesticides in water, especially for those with moderate degradation half-lives and high log K values. Take terbuthylazine as an example, its half-life significantly increased from 31.8 days to 45.2 days in the presence of 10 g L microplastics. Besides, PE microplastics had little impact on the behavior of the pesticides in the water-sediment system. The findings of this study indicated that PE could adsorb pesticides through partitioning, thus influencing the persistence of the pesticides in water.

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