4.7 Article

Effect of LDPE and biodegradable PBAT primary microplastics on bacterial community after four months of soil incubation

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 429, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.128353

Keywords

Biodegradable microplastics; Soil; Dose-effect relationship; Bacterial communities; Ecological risks

Funding

  1. Key Research and Development Program of Shaanxi Province [2020NY-115]
  2. Science and Technology Innovation Team of Innovative Talent Promotion Plan in Shaanxi Province-Innovation Team of Rural Green Development Technology [2021TD-35]
  3. Tianjin Science and Technology Program [18PTZWHZ00110]

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The study found that the amount of the biodegradable plastic PBAT used can affect the physical-chemical properties of soil and bacterial communities. Higher amounts of PBAT decrease the content of NO3--N and TP in the soil, while lower amounts of PBAT increase the diversity of soil bacterial communities.
Biodegradable plastics would be gradually degraded by microbes after being used and discarded, forming biodegradable microplastics (BMPs). It is however not clear if it, like conventional microplastics, can affect the original soil ecological balance. In this study, the non-degradable LDPE (low density polyethylene) was used as the reference primary microplastic, and the BMP PBAT (polyadipate/butylene terephthalate) was used as the test object. The effects of the amount of PBAT on soil physical-chemical properties, bacterial community were investigated using high throughput sequencing. The results showed that when the highest amount of PBAT applied was up to 250 times higher than the normal application amount, resulted in a certain dose-effect, and a higher amount of PBAT would reduce the content of NO3--N and TP. The lower amount of PBAT relatively increased the diversity of soil bacterial communities, and the relative abundance of the unique Azotobacter increased with increasing PBAT amount. The abundance of bacterial community in soil with different PBAT amounts was significantly correlated with the soil's physical-chemical properties. In addition, Mesorhizobium, TM7a and Azotobacter were observed to be highly tolerant bacteria in PBAT containing soil which can be actively explored to study the biodegradation of BMPs PBAT.

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