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Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence.
Environmental Sources
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Sewage sludge application as a vehicle for microplastics in eastern Spanish agricultural soils
Environmental Pollution2020
608 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 50
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Scientists measured microplastics in sewage sludge from Spanish wastewater treatment plants and in agricultural soils receiving sludge applications, finding that sludge application transferred hundreds to thousands of microplastic particles per kilogram into agricultural soil.
Microplastic pollution is becoming a major challenge with the growing use of plastic. In recent years, research about microplastic pollution in the environment has become a field of study with increased interest, with ever expanding findings on sources, sinks and pathways of microplastics. Wastewater treatment plants effectively remove microplastics from wastewater and concentrate them in sewage sludge which is often used to fertilise agricultural fields. Despite this, quantification of microplastic pollution in agricultural fields through the application of sewage sludge is largely unknown. In light of this issue, four wastewater treatment plants and 16 agricultural fields (0-8 sewage sludge applications of 20-22 tons ha per application), located in the east of Spain, were sampled. Microplastics were extracted using a floatation and filtration method, making a distinction between light density microplastics (ρ < 1 g cm) and heavy density microplastics (ρ > 1 g cm). Sewage sludge, on average, had a light density plastic load of 18,000 ± 15,940 microplastics kg and a heavy density plastic load of 32,070 ± 19,080 microplastics kg. Soils without addition of sewage sludge had an average light density plastic load of 930 ± 740 microplastics kg and a heavy density plastic load of 1100 ± 570 microplastics kg. Soils with addition of sewage sludge had an average light density plastic load of 2130 ± 950 microplastics kg and a heavy density plastic load of 3060 ± 1680 microplastics kg. On average, soils' plastic loads increased by 280 light density microplastics kg and 430 heavy density microplastics kg with each successive application of sewage sludge, indicating that sewage sludge application results in accumulation of microplastics in agricultural soils.