PubMed · 2026-06-22
Tiny plastic fragments smaller than 1 micrometer are everywhere in the environment, but our tools for detecting and studying them are still too crude to draw firm conclusions — especially about whether they actually break down in soil and water.
No single analytical method can simultaneously measure size, particle count, shape, and plastic type for nanoplastics below 100 nm in real environmental samples.
Environmental weathering (UV light, physical wear, chemical aging) changes nanoplastic surfaces in ways that can either speed up or block microbial breakdown — making lab studies with pristine plastic beads poor predictors of real-world fate.
The authors propose a three-tier evidence framework (surface modification → partial depolymerization → full mineralization) plus a standardized reporting checklist (NBMI) to separate genuine biodegradation from plastic merely fragmenting or leaching additives.