Papers

61,005 results
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Article Tier 2

Microplastic effects on soil aggregation in sterilized and non-sterilized soils

Researchers tested how microplastics affect soil aggregate stability in both sterilized and non-sterilized soils, finding that microbial activity mediates much of the structural impact and that plastic type influences aggregation differently depending on soil biology.

2024
Article Tier 2

Impacts of Microplastics on the Soil Biophysical Environment

Four common microplastic types (polyacrylic fibers, polyamide beads, polyester fibers, PE fragments) were added to loamy sand soil at environmentally relevant concentrations in a garden experiment and effects on soil-water relationships, structure, and microbial function were measured over 5 weeks. Results showed that microplastics altered water repellency, aggregate stability, and microbial activity in a plastic-type-dependent manner, confirming that microplastics can disrupt fundamental soil biophysical processes.

2018 Environmental Science & Technology 1726 citations
Article Tier 2

Comparing the long-term responses of soil microbial structures and diversities to polyethylene microplastics in different aggregate fractions

Long-term soil incubation with polyethylene microplastics found that MPs altered aggregate stability, inhibited soil enzyme activities, and changed microbial community structure and diversity differently across soil aggregate size fractions, with effects persisting over time.

2021 Environment International 248 citations
Article Tier 2

Association of microplastics with water-stable aggregates formed under laboratory conditions

Scientists found that tiny plastic particles in soil can break apart the natural clumps that keep soil healthy and stable. Different types of plastics had different effects, with some plastics causing more damage to soil structure than others. This matters because damaged soil could affect how well crops grow and how plastic pollution moves through the environment, potentially impacting our food supply.

2026
Article Tier 2

Influence of microplastics on soil aggregate formation: Insights into biological binding agents

A laboratory experiment found that polyethylene microplastics in different shapes (granules, fibers, and films) and aging states significantly alter how soil particles clump together into aggregates, with effects depending on the plastic's shape and the soil's organic matter content. Disruption of soil aggregation by microplastics matters because aggregate structure controls water retention, aeration, and microbial habitat — all fundamental to healthy, productive soils.

2026 Journal of Hazardous Materials
Article Tier 2

Microplastic Effects on Soil Aggregation in Sterilized and Non‐Sterilized Soils

Researchers tested how microplastics affect soil aggregation in both sterilized and biologically active soils, finding that microplastic effects on aggregate stability were strongly mediated by the presence of soil microorganisms. Biologically active soils showed different responses than sterile soils, highlighting the role of the soil microbiome.

2024 Land Degradation and Development
Article Tier 2

Small-size polyethylene and polylactic microplastic alterations on soil aggregate formation with soil sterilization

Researchers tested how small polyethylene and polylactic acid microplastics affect the formation of soil clumps, called aggregates, which are important for healthy soil structure. The microplastics changed aggregate stability through physical interactions rather than by harming soil microbes. This matters because soil structure affects how well crops grow, and widespread microplastic contamination in agricultural fields could subtly alter soil quality.

2024 Chemosphere 10 citations
Article Tier 2

Microplastics Can Inhibit Organic Carbon Mineralization by Influencing Soil Aggregate Distribution and Microbial Community Structure in Cultivated Soil: Evidence from a One-Year Pot Experiment

Researchers conducted a one-year pot experiment to study how different types and concentrations of microplastics affect soil carbon cycling and aggregate stability. They found that microplastics significantly altered soil aggregate size distribution and decreased organic carbon mineralization rates regardless of polymer type. The study suggests that microplastic contamination may slow the natural breakdown of organic carbon in agricultural soils by changing soil structure and microbial communities.

2024 Agronomy 18 citations
Article Tier 2

Microplastic shape, concentration and polymer type affect soil properties and plant biomass

Experiments showed that microplastic shape, concentration, and polymer type all influence soil physical properties and plant biomass, with certain types reducing plant growth. The findings highlight that the wide variety of plastic particle types entering soils creates complex and variable ecological risks.

2020 22 citations
Article Tier 2

Microplastics Increase Soil pH and Decrease Microbial Activities as a Function of Microplastic Shape, Polymer Type, and Exposure Time

Researchers tested twelve different types of microplastics in soil and found that their effects on soil health depended heavily on the shape, plastic type, and how long they were present. Foam and fragment shapes raised soil pH the most, while polyethylene foam increased soil respiration, and several types reduced the activity of important soil enzymes. These findings help explain why microplastic studies often show conflicting results, since the specific characteristics of the plastic matter as much as its presence.

2021 Frontiers in Environmental Science 389 citations
Article Tier 2

The association of microplastics with water-stable aggregates formed under controlled conditions

Researchers compiled data examining how microplastics associate with water-stable soil aggregates formed under controlled laboratory conditions, providing a dataset supporting the linked publication on microplastic-soil aggregate interactions.

2026 Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)
Article Tier 2

Soil texture governs the influence of different microplastics on soil hydraulic properties

This study tested how different types of microplastics affect soil hydraulic properties across varying soil textures, finding that soil texture strongly governs the magnitude of MP impacts on water retention and hydraulic conductivity, with fine-textured soils showing different responses than coarse-textured ones.

2025 Vadose Zone Journal 3 citations
Article Tier 2

Microplastics Can Change Soil Properties and Affect Plant Performance

Researchers tested six different types of microplastics in soil and found that they altered key soil properties including water-holding capacity, bulk density, and microbial activity. These changes in soil structure had cascading effects on plant growth, with some microplastic types reducing above-ground biomass. The study demonstrates that microplastics can fundamentally change how soil functions, with consequences for plant health and ecosystem stability.

2019 Environmental Science & Technology 1910 citations
Article Tier 2

Interactive effects of soil characteristics and polymer types reveal patterns of denitrifying bacteria enrichment in the soil plastisphere

A field study examined how soil characteristics (texture, organic matter, pH) and polymer type interact to determine microplastic persistence and mobility in agricultural soils. The results show that soil properties are as important as plastic type in predicting environmental fate.

2025 Journal of Hazardous Materials 1 citations
Article Tier 2

Minimal Impacts of Microplastics on Soil Physical Properties under Environmentally Relevant Concentrations

Researchers measured the physical properties of silt loam soil after incorporating polyester fibers and polypropylene granules across a wide range of concentrations. The study found that at environmentally relevant concentrations, microplastics had minimal impacts on soil physical properties such as water retention and aggregate stability, suggesting that current contamination levels may not significantly alter soil structure.

2023 Environmental Science & Technology 145 citations
Article Tier 2

Impact of Microplastics on Soil Health: Soil-Water Retention, Shrinkage and Holding Properties

A review of research on microplastics in soil found that plastic particles can alter water retention, shrinkage, and structural properties in ways that could reduce agricultural productivity. Because microplastics are as prevalent in soils as in oceans, their terrestrial impacts warrant much greater research attention.

2020 OakTrust (Texas A&M University Libraries) 1 citations
Article Tier 2

Soil structures and immobilization of typical contaminants in soils in response to diverse microplastics

Soil column experiments with polyethylene, polyacrylonitrile, and PET microplastics at 0.5% by weight found that all three polymer types altered soil aggregate structure and affected the mobility of the hydrophobic organic contaminant phenanthrene and heavy metals through the soil profile. PET MPs most strongly changed soil structure and increased phenanthrene leaching, while PAN MPs had the greatest effect on heavy metal mobility.

2022 Journal of Hazardous Materials 50 citations
Article Tier 2

Effects of microplastics on soil microbiome: The impacts of polymer type, shape, and concentration

Researchers examined how different microplastic polymer types, shapes, and concentrations affected soil bacterial communities, finding that these physical characteristics induced distinct shifts in soil microbiome composition and diversity.

2021 The Science of The Total Environment 215 citations
Meta Analysis Tier 1

Microplastic effects on soil system parameters: a meta-analysis study

Microplastics in soil did not significantly affect dissolved organic carbon, nutrient availability, microbial diversity, or crop biomass, but they did significantly increase soil microorganism abundance and decrease water-stable macro-aggregates, pointing to soil structure degradation as the primary concern.

2022 Environmental Science and Pollution Research 58 citations
Meta Analysis Tier 1

Microplastics have shape- and polymer-dependent effects on soil aggregation and organic matter loss – an experimental and meta-analytical approach

This meta-analysis combined with lab experiments shows that different shapes of microplastics affect soil differently. Fiber-shaped microplastics were especially harmful, breaking apart soil structure and increasing the loss of organic matter — changes that could reduce soil health and crop productivity over time.

2021 Microplastics and Nanoplastics 164 citations
Meta Analysis Tier 1

Microplastics have shape- and polymer-dependent effects on soil processes

This meta-analysis combined published research with lab experiments to show that microplastic shape matters when it comes to soil health effects. Fibers were especially harmful to soil structure regardless of their chemical makeup, while films and foams have been largely overlooked in research. Since healthy soil is essential for growing safe food, understanding how different microplastic shapes affect soil helps us grasp the full scope of plastic pollution's impact.

2020 26 citations
Article Tier 2

Abiotic and Biotic Factors Influencing the Effect of Microplastic on Soil Aggregation

This study examined how abiotic factors (plastic type, concentration) and biotic factors (earthworms, plants) influence microplastic effects on soil aggregation, finding that microplastics disrupted aggregate stability in ways dependent on soil biology.

2019 Soil Systems 170 citations
Article Tier 2

Microplastic effects on soil organic matter dynamics and bacterial communities under contrasting soil environments

Researchers compared microplastic effects on soil organic matter dynamics and bacterial communities across contrasting soil environments, finding that the type of microplastic polymer and soil conditions together determine whether microbial activity and carbon cycling are stimulated or suppressed.

2024
Article Tier 2

The association of microplastics with water-stable aggregates formed under controlled conditions

Researchers compiled data from a controlled study examining the association between microplastics and water-stable soil aggregates, providing the underlying dataset for the linked publication on microplastic-aggregate interactions.

2026 Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)