Abstract
The impact of microplastics (MPs) on soil organisms is still a growing field, yet very little is known about the exposure of ultraviolet (UV) aging of MPs to soil organisms. In this study, we explored the response of the epigeic earthworm Eisenia andrei to pristine and UV-aged polyethylene (PE-MP) exposure at a wide range of environmentally relevant concentrations (0, 0.2, 2, 20, 200 and 2000 mg kg−1) in an organic farm soil for 56d and assessed changes in reproduction, ingestion, egestion and gut microbiome. Results showed that exposure to 20 mg kg−1 pristine PE-MP significantly increased earthworm reproduction by 39 % but the same concentration decreased reproduction by 29 % when they were exposed to UV-aged PE-MP. Ingestion of PE was verified by staining the whole worm body and their casts after 48h of starvation. The amounts of PE-MP found in the body and the casts were positively correlated with PE-MP concentrations in the soil, however only significantly so with pristine PE-MP. A decline in E. andrei gut microbiome alpha diversity and a significantly different community composition were observed in UV-aged PE-MP exposures compared to pristine PE-MP. Relative to the control treatments, Proteobacteria increased up to 135 %, Actinobacteria increased up to 35 %, and Firmicutes decreased up to 38 % under UV-aged PE-MP exposure, whereas Cyanobacteria increased up to 19 times in the pristine PE-MP treatments. These results confirm the negative effect of UV-aged PE-MP on earthworms even at low concentrations and could have important implications in the well-functioning of agricultural soils.
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