Wildfire heat determines whether plastic debris clogs or opens soil pores
Jie S, Sun Q, Deng Y, Ma P, Nan J
Soil Health
Wildfire smoke isn't the only thing a fire leaves behind in your garden soil: melted plastic debris from mulch films and irrigation tubing can seal off the tiny air and water channels roots depend on, and the damage or recovery depends entirely on how hot the soil gets.
Scientists mixed tiny plastic particles into a type of fine, windblown soil and then heated it to temperatures you'd see in a wildfire. At middling temperatures the plastic melts and plugs up the gaps between soil particles, cutting off water and air flow. Once temperatures climb higher, the plastic burns away and the gaps reopen, sometimes creating even more pore space than the soil had before.
Key Findings
At 200-300°C, melted polyethylene microplastics reduced total soil porosity by 26.5%-63.6% relative to 100°C, with higher plastic content causing greater pore loss.
At 600°C, after plastics burned out, porosity rebounded to maximum values (0.031-0.043 mm), increasing 24%-258% compared to 300°C levels.
Mesopores (2-50 nm) dominated pore-size distribution across all conditions, but macropore proportion surged to 51.7%-55.2% at high temperatures in high-microplastic samples.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers burned loess soil mixed with varying amounts of polyethylene microplastics at temperatures up to 600°C to simulate wildfires and heatwaves. They found that melting microplastics clog soil pores at moderate heat, but as temperatures rise further and plastics burn off, pores reopen and even expand, permanently altering the soil's structure.
Abstract Preview
Original paper
Pore-structure responses of polyethylene microplastic-amended Malan loess under different thermal regimes.
Under the context of global climate change, increasingly frequent heatwaves and wildfires subject near-surface soils to substantial thermal disturbance. Microplastics, as emerging persistent pollut...
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Microplastic pollution refers to the widespread accumulation of small synthetic plastic particles in environmental systems, where they persist indefinitely due to their resistance to natural degradation. Plants actively uptake these microplastics through their root systems and translocate them
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