Abstract

Environmental contamination by microplastics is now considered an emerging threat to biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Soil ecosystems, particularly agricultural land, have been recognized as a major sink of microplastics, but the impacts of microplastics on soil ecosystems (e.g., above and below ground) remain largely unknown. In this study, different types of microplastics [biodegradable polylactic acid (PLA)], conventional high-density polyethylene (HDPE), and microplastic clothing fibers were added to soil containing the endogeic <i>Aporrectodea rosea</i> (rosy-tipped earthworm) and planted with <i>Lolium perenne</i> (perennial ryegrass) to assess the biophysical soil response in a mesocosm experiment. When exposed to fibers or PLA microplastics, fewer seeds germinated. There was also a reduction in shoot height with PLA. The biomass of <i>A. rosea</i> exposed to HDPE was significantly reduced compared to control samples. Furthermore, with HDPE present there was a decrease in soil pH. The size distribution of water-stable soil aggregates was altered when microplastics were present, suggesting potential alterations of soil stability. This study provides evidence that microplastics manufactured of HDPE and PLA, and synthetic fibers can affect the development of <i>L. perenne</i>, health of <i>A. rosea</i> and basic, but crucial soil properties, with potential further impacts on soil ecosystem functioning.

Keywords

MicroplasticsEnvironmental scienceEcosystemMesocosmEarthwormSoil waterHigh-density polyethyleneAgronomyEcologyBiologySoil scienceChemistryPolyethylene

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Publication Info

Year
2019
Type
article
Volume
53
Issue
19
Pages
11496-11506
Citations
1281
Access
Closed

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Bas Boots, Connor William Russell, Dannielle S. Green (2019). Effects of Microplastics in Soil Ecosystems: Above and Below Ground. Environmental Science & Technology , 53 (19) , 11496-11506. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.9b03304

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/acs.est.9b03304