Disentangling mechanisms by which microplastic films affect plant-soil systems: physical effects of particles can override toxic effects of additives

IF 6 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Y. M. Lozano, C. Perlenfein, M. G. Bernal, M. C. Rillig
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Microplastics, polymer-based particles < 5 mm, affect plant–soil systems positively or negatively, suggesting there are different modes of action. Microplastics, as particles, have physical effects but the leaching of additives likely contributes chemical mechanisms, both of which may be dependent on microplastic size. To disentangle such mechanisms, we established a controlled experiment involving polypropylene and polyethylene films of small, medium and large size, and we evaluated the individual and combined effect of plastic particles and additives (leachates from plastic particles) on soil properties and plant performance of the phytometer Daucus carota and on bare soils.

Results

We find that additives better explained variation in soil properties (e.g., 44.6% vs 1.3%). Soil respiration and aggregation were negatively affected for additives, likely due to the presence of toxic substances. Overall, such effects increased as plastic size decreased. By contrast, plastic particles better explained plant biomass responses. The positive effect of particles on aeration which may promote root penetration and nutrient uptake, and microplastics itself as a source of carbon potentially promoting soil microbial activity, help explain the positive effect of particles on plant biomass. Plants mitigated the negative effects of additives on bare soils while enhancing the positive effects of particles. This improvement was likely linked to an increase in root activity and rhizodeposition, as plastic particles improved soil aeration. The combined effect of additives and particles, which mimics the microplastic found in the soil, mitigated their individual negative effects on plant–soil systems. As the negative effect of additives could have been masked by the positive effects of particles, simply reporting net positive effects would capture only part of the response.

Conclusions

Additives and plastic particles differently affect soil properties and plant biomass. Additives primarily negatively affect soil properties due to toxic substances, while plastic particles enhance plant biomass likely by improving soil aeration. When examining microplastics effects on terrestrial systems (i.e., the combined effect of additives and particles), the negative effect of additives may be masked by the positive effects of plastic particles. Reporting only net positive effects risks overlooking these underlying negative effects. Plants can mitigate the negative impacts of additives and amplify the positive effects of plastic particles. Our study emphasizes the importance of investigating both the individual and combined effects of additives and particles to fully understand and address the impacts of microplastics on terrestrial ecosystems.

解密微塑料薄膜影响植物-土壤系统的机制:微粒的物理效应可能超过添加剂的毒性效应
背景微塑料(基于聚合物的 5 毫米微粒)会对植物-土壤系统产生积极或消极的影响,这表明存在不同的作用模式。微塑料作为颗粒会产生物理影响,但添加剂的浸出可能会产生化学机制,这两种机制可能都取决于微塑料的大小。为了厘清这些机制,我们建立了一个涉及小、中、大尺寸聚丙烯和聚乙烯薄膜的对照实验,并评估了塑料微粒和添加剂(塑料微粒的浸出物)对土壤特性和植物生长性能的单独和综合影响,以及对裸露土壤的影响。添加剂对土壤呼吸和团聚产生了负面影响,这可能是由于添加剂中含有有毒物质。总体而言,这种影响随着塑料尺寸的减小而增加。相比之下,塑料微粒能更好地解释植物生物量反应。微粒对通气的积极影响可能会促进根系的渗透和养分的吸收,而微塑料本身作为一种碳源可能会促进土壤微生物的活动,这些都有助于解释微粒对植物生物量的积极影响。植物减轻了添加剂对裸露土壤的负面影响,同时增强了微粒的积极作用。这种改善可能与根系活动和根茎沉积的增加有关,因为塑料微粒改善了土壤的通气性。添加剂和颗粒的共同作用模拟了土壤中的微塑料,减轻了它们各自对植物-土壤系统的负面影响。添加剂和塑料微粒对土壤性质和植物生物量的影响各不相同。添加剂主要由于有毒物质对土壤性质产生负面影响,而塑料微粒则可能通过改善土壤通气性来提高植物生物量。在研究微塑料对陆地系统的影响(即添加剂和微粒的综合影响)时,添加剂的负面影响可能会被塑料微粒的正面影响所掩盖。只报告净正面效应可能会忽略这些潜在的负面效应。植物可以减轻添加剂的负面影响,放大塑料微粒的正面效应。我们的研究强调了调查添加剂和微粒的单独效应和综合效应的重要性,以全面了解和解决微塑料对陆地生态系统的影响。
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来源期刊
Environmental Sciences Europe
Environmental Sciences Europe Environmental Science-Pollution
CiteScore
11.20
自引率
1.70%
发文量
110
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: ESEU is an international journal, focusing primarily on Europe, with a broad scope covering all aspects of environmental sciences, including the main topic regulation. ESEU will discuss the entanglement between environmental sciences and regulation because, in recent years, there have been misunderstandings and even disagreement between stakeholders in these two areas. ESEU will help to improve the comprehension of issues between environmental sciences and regulation. ESEU will be an outlet from the German-speaking (DACH) countries to Europe and an inlet from Europe to the DACH countries regarding environmental sciences and regulation. Moreover, ESEU will facilitate the exchange of ideas and interaction between Europe and the DACH countries regarding environmental regulatory issues. Although Europe is at the center of ESEU, the journal will not exclude the rest of the world, because regulatory issues pertaining to environmental sciences can be fully seen only from a global perspective.
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