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Fate and Impacts of Microplastics in the Environment: Hydrosphere, Pedosphere, and Atmosphere

Journal

ENVIRONMENTS
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/environments10050070

Keywords

microplastics; hydrosphere; pedosphere; atmosphere; ecotoxicology

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Plastic waste is causing an increase in plastic litter, especially in undesignated areas like coastal shorelines. This leads to the formation of microplastics, which are small fragments of plastic that have ecotoxicological impacts on aquatic environments and soil systems. Microplastics can come from primary sources such as plastic pellets and beads in makeup products, as well as from secondary sources like normal-use plastics and textile washing. While the fate of microplastics in the hydrosphere has been extensively studied, the transport mechanisms in the pedosphere and atmosphere remain poorly understood.
Plastic litter is on the rise where plastic waste ends up in undesignated areas such as the coastal shorelines, where the plastic is exposed to environmental conditions. As a result, the degradation and decomposition of plastics occur, leading to the formation of smaller fragments of plastics, termed microplastics. Microplastics have recently been considered as an emerging class of contaminants due to their ecotoxicological impact on the aquatic environment as well as soil matrix. Microplastics are of a size less than 5 mm and are produced from either a primary source (such as plastic pellets, and beads in makeup products) or a secondary source (such as the wear and tear of normal-use plastics and washing of clothes and textiles). Microplastic pollution is spread across the hydrosphere, pedosphere, and atmosphere, and these environmental zones are being studied for microplastic accumulation individually. However, there exists a source-sink dynamic between these environmental compartments. This study reviews the available literature on microplastic research and discusses the current state of research on the fate and transport of microplastic in the hydrosphere, pedosphere, and atmosphere, explores the ecotoxicological impact of microplastics on aquatic and soil communities, and provides prospective future research directions and plastic waste management strategies to control microplastic pollution. While the fate of microplastics in the hydrosphere is well-documented and researched, studies on understanding the transport mechanism of microplastics in the pedosphere and atmosphere remain poorly understood.

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