Fragmentation and depolymerization of microplastics in the earthworm gut a potential for microplastic bioremediation?

The accumulation of microplastics poses potential risks to soil health. Here, we did a preliminary exploration on the potential of Lumbricus terrestris (Oligochaeta) to reduce low-density polyethylene (LDPE), polylactic acid (PLA), and polybutylene adipate terephthalate (PBAT) microplastic (20–648 µm) contamination in soils. The ingestion of microplastics-contaminated soil (1% of microplastics, dw/dw) in a mesocosm system and the ingestion of pure microplastics in the Petri Dish by earthworms were studied. Results show that earthworms survived in the microplastics-contaminated soil (0% mortality in 35 days) but barely when exposed solely to microplastics (30–80% mortality in 4 days). Size-dependent ingestion of microplastics was not observed. The fragmentation of LDPE microplastics in the gizzard facilitated by soil was confirmed by the significantly increased ratio of small-sized (20–113 µm) microplastics from the bulk soil to the gut (from 8.4% to 18.8%). PLA and PBAT microplastics were fragmented by gizzard without the facilitation of soil, the ratios of small-sized (20–113 µm) PLA and PBAT microplastics in the gut were 55.5% and 108.2% higher than in respective pristine distributions. Substantial depolymerization of PLA (weight-average molar mass reduced by 17.7% with shift in molecular weight distribution) and suspected depolymerization of PBAT were observed in the worm gut, while no change in the molar mass was observed for PLA and PBAT microplastics buried in the soil for 49 days. Our results suggest that ingested microplastics could undergo fragmentation and depolymerization (for certain polymers) in the earthworm gut. Further research is needed to reveal the mechanisms of polymer depolymerization in the earthworm gut and to evaluate the feasibility of microplastic bioremediation with earthworms.

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Main Authors: Meng, Ke, Huerta Lwanga, Esperanza Doctora autora 2039, van der Zee, Maarten autor/a, Munhoz, Davi Renato autor, Geissen Geissen, Violette Doctora autora 2022
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Microplásticos, Lombrices de tierra, Contaminación de suelos, Biorremediación, Despolimerización,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.130765
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:63385
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Microplásticos
Lombrices de tierra
Contaminación de suelos
Biorremediación
Despolimerización
Microplásticos
Lombrices de tierra
Contaminación de suelos
Biorremediación
Despolimerización
spellingShingle Microplásticos
Lombrices de tierra
Contaminación de suelos
Biorremediación
Despolimerización
Microplásticos
Lombrices de tierra
Contaminación de suelos
Biorremediación
Despolimerización
Meng, Ke
Huerta Lwanga, Esperanza Doctora autora 2039
van der Zee, Maarten autor/a
Munhoz, Davi Renato autor
Geissen Geissen, Violette Doctora autora 2022
Fragmentation and depolymerization of microplastics in the earthworm gut a potential for microplastic bioremediation?
description The accumulation of microplastics poses potential risks to soil health. Here, we did a preliminary exploration on the potential of Lumbricus terrestris (Oligochaeta) to reduce low-density polyethylene (LDPE), polylactic acid (PLA), and polybutylene adipate terephthalate (PBAT) microplastic (20–648 µm) contamination in soils. The ingestion of microplastics-contaminated soil (1% of microplastics, dw/dw) in a mesocosm system and the ingestion of pure microplastics in the Petri Dish by earthworms were studied. Results show that earthworms survived in the microplastics-contaminated soil (0% mortality in 35 days) but barely when exposed solely to microplastics (30–80% mortality in 4 days). Size-dependent ingestion of microplastics was not observed. The fragmentation of LDPE microplastics in the gizzard facilitated by soil was confirmed by the significantly increased ratio of small-sized (20–113 µm) microplastics from the bulk soil to the gut (from 8.4% to 18.8%). PLA and PBAT microplastics were fragmented by gizzard without the facilitation of soil, the ratios of small-sized (20–113 µm) PLA and PBAT microplastics in the gut were 55.5% and 108.2% higher than in respective pristine distributions. Substantial depolymerization of PLA (weight-average molar mass reduced by 17.7% with shift in molecular weight distribution) and suspected depolymerization of PBAT were observed in the worm gut, while no change in the molar mass was observed for PLA and PBAT microplastics buried in the soil for 49 days. Our results suggest that ingested microplastics could undergo fragmentation and depolymerization (for certain polymers) in the earthworm gut. Further research is needed to reveal the mechanisms of polymer depolymerization in the earthworm gut and to evaluate the feasibility of microplastic bioremediation with earthworms.
format Texto
topic_facet Microplásticos
Lombrices de tierra
Contaminación de suelos
Biorremediación
Despolimerización
author Meng, Ke
Huerta Lwanga, Esperanza Doctora autora 2039
van der Zee, Maarten autor/a
Munhoz, Davi Renato autor
Geissen Geissen, Violette Doctora autora 2022
author_facet Meng, Ke
Huerta Lwanga, Esperanza Doctora autora 2039
van der Zee, Maarten autor/a
Munhoz, Davi Renato autor
Geissen Geissen, Violette Doctora autora 2022
author_sort Meng, Ke
title Fragmentation and depolymerization of microplastics in the earthworm gut a potential for microplastic bioremediation?
title_short Fragmentation and depolymerization of microplastics in the earthworm gut a potential for microplastic bioremediation?
title_full Fragmentation and depolymerization of microplastics in the earthworm gut a potential for microplastic bioremediation?
title_fullStr Fragmentation and depolymerization of microplastics in the earthworm gut a potential for microplastic bioremediation?
title_full_unstemmed Fragmentation and depolymerization of microplastics in the earthworm gut a potential for microplastic bioremediation?
title_sort fragmentation and depolymerization of microplastics in the earthworm gut a potential for microplastic bioremediation?
url https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.130765
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:633852024-03-12T12:58:52ZFragmentation and depolymerization of microplastics in the earthworm gut a potential for microplastic bioremediation? Meng, Ke Huerta Lwanga, Esperanza Doctora autora 2039 van der Zee, Maarten autor/a Munhoz, Davi Renato autor Geissen Geissen, Violette Doctora autora 2022 textengThe accumulation of microplastics poses potential risks to soil health. Here, we did a preliminary exploration on the potential of Lumbricus terrestris (Oligochaeta) to reduce low-density polyethylene (LDPE), polylactic acid (PLA), and polybutylene adipate terephthalate (PBAT) microplastic (20–648 µm) contamination in soils. The ingestion of microplastics-contaminated soil (1% of microplastics, dw/dw) in a mesocosm system and the ingestion of pure microplastics in the Petri Dish by earthworms were studied. Results show that earthworms survived in the microplastics-contaminated soil (0% mortality in 35 days) but barely when exposed solely to microplastics (30–80% mortality in 4 days). Size-dependent ingestion of microplastics was not observed. The fragmentation of LDPE microplastics in the gizzard facilitated by soil was confirmed by the significantly increased ratio of small-sized (20–113 µm) microplastics from the bulk soil to the gut (from 8.4% to 18.8%). PLA and PBAT microplastics were fragmented by gizzard without the facilitation of soil, the ratios of small-sized (20–113 µm) PLA and PBAT microplastics in the gut were 55.5% and 108.2% higher than in respective pristine distributions. Substantial depolymerization of PLA (weight-average molar mass reduced by 17.7% with shift in molecular weight distribution) and suspected depolymerization of PBAT were observed in the worm gut, while no change in the molar mass was observed for PLA and PBAT microplastics buried in the soil for 49 days. Our results suggest that ingested microplastics could undergo fragmentation and depolymerization (for certain polymers) in the earthworm gut. Further research is needed to reveal the mechanisms of polymer depolymerization in the earthworm gut and to evaluate the feasibility of microplastic bioremediation with earthworms.The accumulation of microplastics poses potential risks to soil health. Here, we did a preliminary exploration on the potential of Lumbricus terrestris (Oligochaeta) to reduce low-density polyethylene (LDPE), polylactic acid (PLA), and polybutylene adipate terephthalate (PBAT) microplastic (20–648 µm) contamination in soils. The ingestion of microplastics-contaminated soil (1% of microplastics, dw/dw) in a mesocosm system and the ingestion of pure microplastics in the Petri Dish by earthworms were studied. Results show that earthworms survived in the microplastics-contaminated soil (0% mortality in 35 days) but barely when exposed solely to microplastics (30–80% mortality in 4 days). Size-dependent ingestion of microplastics was not observed. The fragmentation of LDPE microplastics in the gizzard facilitated by soil was confirmed by the significantly increased ratio of small-sized (20–113 µm) microplastics from the bulk soil to the gut (from 8.4% to 18.8%). PLA and PBAT microplastics were fragmented by gizzard without the facilitation of soil, the ratios of small-sized (20–113 µm) PLA and PBAT microplastics in the gut were 55.5% and 108.2% higher than in respective pristine distributions. Substantial depolymerization of PLA (weight-average molar mass reduced by 17.7% with shift in molecular weight distribution) and suspected depolymerization of PBAT were observed in the worm gut, while no change in the molar mass was observed for PLA and PBAT microplastics buried in the soil for 49 days. Our results suggest that ingested microplastics could undergo fragmentation and depolymerization (for certain polymers) in the earthworm gut. Further research is needed to reveal the mechanisms of polymer depolymerization in the earthworm gut and to evaluate the feasibility of microplastic bioremediation with earthworms.MicroplásticosLombrices de tierraContaminación de suelosBiorremediaciónDespolimerizaciónJournal of Hazardous Materialshttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.130765Acceso en línea sin restricciones