| Literature DB >> 32281177 |
Dan Zhang1, Ee Ling Ng2, Wanli Hu3, Hongyuan Wang1, Pablo Galaviz4, Hude Yang5, Wentao Sun6, Chongxiao Li7, Xingwang Ma8, Bin Fu3, Peiyi Zhao9, Fulin Zhang10, Shuqin Jin11, Mingdong Zhou12, Lianfeng Du13, Chang Peng14, Xuejun Zhang15, Zhiyu Xu16, Bin Xi16, Xiaoxia Liu17, Shiyou Sun18, Zhenhua Cheng19, Lihua Jiang20, Yufeng Wang21, Liang Gong6, Changlin Kou22, Yan Li23, Youhua Ma24, Dongfeng Huang25, Jian Zhu26, Jianwu Yao27, Chaowen Lin28, Song Qin29, Liuqiang Zhou30, Binghui He31, Deli Chen2, Huanchun Li9, Limei Zhai1, Qiuliang Lei1, Shuxia Wu1, Yitao Zhang1, Junting Pan1, Baojing Gu32,33, Hongbin Liu1.
Abstract
Plastic pollution is a global concern given its prevalence in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. Studies have been conducted on the distribution and impact of plastic pollution in marine ecosystems, but little is known on terrestrial ecosystems. Plastic mulch has been widely used to increase crop yields worldwide, yet the impact of plastic residues in cropland soils to soil health and crop production in the long term remained unclear. In this paper, using a global meta-analysis, we found that the use of plastic mulch can indeed increase crop yields on average by 25%-42% in the immediate season due to the increase of soil temperature (+8%) and moisture (+17%). However, the unabated accumulation of film residues in the field negatively impacts its physicochemical properties linked to healthy soil and threatens food production in the long term. It has multiple negative impacts on plant growth including crop yield (at the mean rate of -3% for every additional 100 kg/ha of film residue), plant height (-2%) and root weight (-5%), and soil properties including soil water evaporation capacity (-2%), soil water infiltration rate (-8%), soil organic matter (-0.8%) and soil available phosphorus (-5%) based on meta-regression. Using a nationwide field survey of China, the largest user of plastic mulch worldwide, we found that plastic residue accumulation in cropland soils has reached 550,800 tonnes, with an estimated 6%-10% reduction in cotton yield in some polluted sites based on current level of plastic residue content. Immediate actions should be taken to ensure the recovery of plastic film mulch and limit further increase in film residue loading to maintain the sustainability of these croplands.Entities:
Keywords: crop yield; long-term consequence; meta-analysis; plastic residue; policy; soil health
Year: 2020 PMID: 32281177 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863