4.7 Article

Soil contamination by microplastics in relation to local agricultural development as revealed by FTIR, ICP-MS and pyrolysis-GC/MS

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 303, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119016

Keywords

Polymer microparticles; Intensive agriculture; Pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; Infrared spectroscopy; Heavy metals; Moknine province

Funding

  1. University of Sfax

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Plastic film mulching and use of wastewaters for irrigation are common agricultural practices in Tunisia, which have led to the contamination of farmland soil by microplastics. A study in the Moknine province found that the predominant type of microplastics in the soil is polypropylene, and these microplastics also carry a wide range of heavy metals, indicating soil contamination.
Plastic film mulching and use of wastewaters for irrigation have been common agricultural practices for over half a century in Tunisia, especially in arid regions, resulting in the undesired creation of a pathway for microplastics (MPs) to enter farmland soil. In order to assess the extent and characteristics of soil contamination by MPs in the Moknine province, an area of intensive agricultural practices, 16 farmland soil samples were collected and characterized. The total concentration of targeted MPs was 50-880 items/kg; among them, the most common MPs type being polypropylene (PP), mainly occurring as white/transparent fibers with small size (cross section <0.3 mm). SEM images of MPs surfaces revealed multiple features related to environmental exposure and degradation. ATR-FTIR spectroscopy and pyrolysis-GC/MS analyses enabled the accurate identification of MPs separated from the embedding soil micro- and macro-aggregates. Finally, contamination of the polymeric microparticles with a broad range of metals was found by ICP-MS analysis, suggesting that MPs can be vectors for transporting heavy metals in the soil and indicators of soil contamination as a result of mismanagement of industrial wastewaters.

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