The Guardian Australia

Worms fail to thrive in soil containing microplast­ics – study

- Page 26

Worms fail to thrive in earth containing microplast­ics, new research has shown, adding to the growing body of evidence of impacts from the increasing­ly widespread contaminan­ts on the natural world. The rosy-tipped earthworm,

Aporrectod­ea rosea, is one of the most common found in farmland in temperate regions. Scientists found that worms placed in soil loaded with high density polyethyle­ne (HDPE) – a common plastic used for bags and bottles – for 30 days lost about 3% of their body weight, compared with a control sample of similar worms placed in similar soil without HDPE, which put on 5% in body weight over the same period.

Bas Boots, lecturer in biology at Anglia Ruskin University, and lead author of the study, said the specific reasons for the observed weight loss were not yet clear, but could be owing to the effects of microplast­ics on the worms’ digestion. “These effects include the obstructio­n and irritation of the digestive tract, limiting the absorption of nutrients and reducing growth,” he said.

If the presence of microplast­ics inhibits earthworm growth on a wide scale, it could have implicatio­ns for soil health and farming, as worms are vital part of the farmland soil ecosystem.

The research, published in the journal Environmen­tal Science and Technology, adds to a growing number of studies examining the effects of microscopi­c particles of plastics on invertebra­tes and fish. While it is too soon to draw conclusion­s about the effects on human health, studies have found harm to aquatic lugworms as well as possible effects on fish and molluscs.

Microplast­ics have now been found in tapwater, the seas around the world, human stools, in the air and a wide variety of other environmen­ts.

Soils in many places are likely to harbour large numbers of microplast­ics, deposited there from their presence in sewage, in water and in the air. However, the extent of contaminat­ion is largely unknown, though there are European studies reporting anything between 700 and 4,000 plastic particles per kilogram of soil in some agricultur­al land.

 ?? Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA ?? An earthworm emerges from the ground.
Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA An earthworm emerges from the ground.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia