Growth of Grasses and Forbs, Nutrient Concentration, and Microbial Activity in Soil Treated With Microbeads

Document Type

Article

Journal/Book Title/Conference

Environmental Pollution

Volume

324

Publisher

Elsevier Ltd

Publication Date

5-1-2023

Keywords

Multifunctionality, Polyethylene, Polystyrene, Total plant biomass, Microbial activity, Nutrient supply

First Page

1

Last Page

10

Abstract

Microplastics have emerged as an important threat to terrestrial ecosystems. To date, little research has been conducted on investigating the effects of microplastics on ecosystem functions and multifunctionality. In this study, we conducted the pot experiments containing five plant communities consisting of Phragmites australis, Cynanchum chinense, Setaria viridis, Glycine soja, Artemisia capillaris, Suaeda glauca, and Limonium sinense and added polyethylene (PE) and polystyrene (PS) microbeads to the soil (contained a mixture of 1.5 kg loam and 3 kg sand) at two concentrations of 0.15 g/kg (lower concentration, hereinafter referred to as PE-L and PS-L) and 0.5 g/kg (higher concentration, hereinafter referred to as PE-H and PS-H) to explore the effects of microplastics on total plant biomass, microbial activity, nutrient supply, and multifunctionality. The results showed that PS-L significantly decreased the total plant biomass (p = 0.034), primarily by inhibiting the growth of the roots. β-glucosaminidase decreased with PS-L, PS-H, and PE-L (p < 0.001) while the phosphatase was noticeably augmented (p < 0.001). The observation suggests that the microplastics diminished the nitrogen requirements and increased the phosphorus requirements of the microbes. The decrease in β-glucosaminidase diminished ammonium content (p < 0.001). Moreover, PS-L, PS-H, and PE-H reduced the soil total nitrogen content (p < 0.001), and only PS-H considerably reduced the soil total phosphorus content (p < 0.001), affecting the ratio of N/P markedly (p = 0.024).

Share

COinS