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Soil microplastic characteristics and the effects on soil properties and biota: A systematic review and meta-analysis*

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 313, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.120183

Keywords

Soil microplastics; Meta -analysis; Soil physicochemical property; Soil biota

Funding

  1. Open Fund of the Key Laboratory of Coastal Zone Exploitation and Protection, Ministry of Natural Resources [2019CZEPK01]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41771243]
  3. National Key Researches and Development Program of China [2017YFD0800305]

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The soil environment serves as a major source of microplastics in other ecosystems, with agricultural soils being particularly affected. Microplastic exposure can negatively impact soil physicochemical properties and biota, including soil structure and nutrient cycling. Invertebrates show higher sensitivity to microplastics, leading to oxidative stress and gene expression changes. However, more comprehensive research is needed to understand the complete source-sink mechanism, exposure hazards, and overall toxic effects of soil microplastics.
The soil environment serves as an assembling area for microplastics, and is an important secondary source of microplastics in other environmental media. Recently, soil microplastics have been extensively studied; however, high variability is observed among the research results owing to different soil properties, and the complexity of soil microplastic composition. The present study amassed the findings of 2886 experimental groups, across 38 studies from 2016 to 2022, and used meta-analysis to quantitatively analyze the differences in the effects of microplastic exposure on soil physicochemical properties and biota. The results showed that among the existing soil microplastic research, agricultural soils maintained a higher environmental exposure distribution than other environments. Microplastic fibers and fragments were the predominant shapes, indicating that the extensive use of agricultural films are the primary influencing factor of soil microplastic pollution at present. The results of the meta-analysis found that microplastic exposure had a significant negative effect on soil bulk density (lnRR = -0.04) and aggregate stability (lnRR = -0.085), indicating that microplastics may damage the integrity of soil structure or damage the soil surface. The significant changes in plant root biomass and soil phosphatase further signified the potential impact of microplastics on soil nutrient and geochemical element cycling. We further constructed species sensitivity distribution curves, revealing that invertebrates had a higher species sensitivity to microplastics, as they can pass through the gut wall of soil nematodes, causing oxidative stress and affecting gene expression. In general, soil is an interconnected complex, and microplastic exposure can directly or indirectly interact with environmental chemical processes in the soil environment, potentially harming the soil ecosystem; however, current research remains insufficient with respect to breadth and depth in terms of the comprehensive source-sink mechanism of soil microplastics, the hazard of exposure, and the overall toxic effects.

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