Nanoplastics are abundant in the environment and substantially impact public health. However, existing knowledge on the effects of nanoplastics on terrestrial plants is inconsistent. The absence of systematic techniques for assessing these impacts restricts the capacity to generalize from recent findings and creates significant procedural barriers.
Study: Threats to Terrestrial Plants from Emerging Nanoplastics. Image Credit: Alex Stemmers/Shutterstock.com
A recent study published in the journal ACS Nano tackles this problem by doing a meta-analysis to determine the overall severity of nanoplastic effects on terrestrial plants. The researchers also developed a machine-learning technique for predicting the harmful impacts and driving features of nanoplastic toxicity.
Nanoplastics: Overview and Environmental Impacts
Since the 1950s, around 8.3 billion tons of plastics have been generated, with over 367 million tons generated in 2020 alone. In addition to huge visible trash, plastics in the ecosystem degrade into microplastics and nanoplastics, with distinct environmental impacts.
Nanoplastics differ from microplastics in size, quantity, environmental reactivity, and absorption, and they constitute a bigger, yet unfathomable, danger to the ecosystem and public health.
Soil is a major sink for nanoplastics, and plastic pollution on land exceeds that in the water by several orders of magnitude. However, the majority of studies concentrate on nanoplastics in aquatic settings. Nanoplastics reach soil through the disintegration of bigger plastic-containing objects, sewage-derived landfills, atmospheric exposure, and sewage irrigation.
Despite current scientific attempts to analyze the chemical fingerprints of nanoplastics, the quantity and mass proportion of nanoplastics in soils remain unknown. Moreover, the bulk of earlier nanoplastic research focused only on the negative impacts of nanoplastics on soil animals such as invertebrates, reptiles, and mammals, with few studies concentrating on terrestrial plants.
Effects of Nanoplastics on Terrestrial Plants
Terrestrial plants are those that grow on land. Terrestrial plants are separated into two parts: the root system and the shoot system. The root system is made up of roots that take nutrients from the ground and store them. On the other hand, the shoot system is made up of stems and leaves that transport chemicals up and down the plant.
Terrestrial plants have an important role in the functioning of the ecosystem and in delivering crucial ecological services such as food and nutrition security.
Some data on nanoplastics has already been generated from individual empirical studies. This data includes physicochemical parameters of nanoplastics such as size and interface chemistry, plant factors like species and developmental stages, and experimental settings such as exposure environment and duration.
However, the results from individual studies are often conflicting, leading to uncertainty and heterogeneity in the corpus of nanotoxicology publications. Therefore, integrating quantitative and qualitative data from a wide range of publications for risk analysis and evidence-based regulatory precautions is a crucial task.
What Did the Researchers Do in This Study?
The primary goal of this research was to fill this information gap by combining a meta-analysis with a machine-learning technique from the complete corpus of nanoplastic publications. The researchers hypothesized that a systematic study could accelerate the growth of nanoplastic risk analysis and create successful regulatory policies in the future.
Meta-analysis can measure the amount (rather than just the presence) of nanoplastics' effects on terrestrial plants and discover causes of variation in statistical data. The machine-learning technique enables the creation of quantitative forecasting models based on complex algorithms.
The combined meta-analysis and machine learning methodologies have been employed in a variety of industries, including nanotechnology, agriculture, and healthcare. These approaches can aid in discovering previously unknown correlations between quantum dot characteristics, cytotoxicity, and reliable signature genes, improving diagnostic and treatment tactics.
Key Developments of the Research
The integrated meta-analysis and machine learning approaches were utilized effectively to compile and classify nanoplastic cytotoxic effects from nanotoxicology research. The researchers reported that nanoplastics have profound impacts on terrestrial plants. Still, the magnitudes and variety of these effects are dependent on toxicity measures, plant features, nanoplastic properties, and exposure settings.
These findings show that the dangers of nanoplastics depend on various responses from molecular to ecological sizes. These responses are based on the spatial and functional intricacies of nanoplastics and, as such, are unique to both plastic properties and environmental circumstances.
In this regard, future research should describe and reflect on the key driving factors of nanoplastic effects on terrestrial plants.
Based on the outcomes of this research, it is reasonable to conclude that the combined meta-analysis and machine learning strategy can pave the way for a universal mitigation solution by optimizing key driving factors of nanoplastic toxicity.
Reference
Dang, F. et al. (2022). Threats to Terrestrial Plants from Emerging Nanoplastics. ACS Nano. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c07627
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