×
验证码:
换一张
忘记密码?
记住我
切换中国科技网通行证登录
×
切换中国科技网通行证登录
登录
中文版
|
English
登录
注册
ALL
ORCID
题名
作者
学科领域
关键词
资助项目
文献类型
出处
收录类别
出版者
发表日期
存缴日期
学科门类
专利类型
学习讨论厅
图片搜索
粘贴图片网址
首页
研究单元&专题
作者
文献类型
学科分类
知识图谱
新闻&公告
在结果中检索
研究单元&专题
中国科学院海岸带环境... [3]
作者
陈令新 [2]
王运庆 [2]
吕敏 [2]
李连祯 [1]
骆永明 [1]
涂晨 [1]
更多...
文献类型
期刊论文 [3]
发表日期
2022 [2]
2019 [1]
语种
英语 [2]
中文 [1]
出处
CRITICAL R... [2]
科学通报 [1]
资助项目
收录类别
SCI [2]
CSCD [1]
专利类型
资助机构
ERC Advanc... [2]
EU [2]
Federal Mi... [2]
National S... [2]
Youth Inno... [2]
×
知识图谱
YIC-IR
开始提交
已提交作品
待认领作品
已认领作品
未提交全文
收藏管理
QQ客服
官方微博
反馈留言
浏览/检索结果:
共3条,第1-3条
帮助
已选(
0
)
清除
条数/页:
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
65
70
75
80
85
90
95
100
排序方式:
请选择
作者升序
作者降序
题名升序
题名降序
WOS被引频次升序
WOS被引频次降序
提交时间升序
提交时间降序
发表日期升序
发表日期降序
期刊影响因子升序
期刊影响因子降序
Tire wear particles: An emerging threat to soil health
期刊论文
CRITICAL REVIEWS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2022, 页码: 19
作者:
Ding, Jing
;
Lv, Min
;
Zhu, Dong
;
Leifheit, Eva F.
;
Chen, Qing-Lin
;
Wang, Yun-Qing
;
Chen, Ling-Xin
;
Rillig, Matthias C.
;
Zhu, Yong-Guan
收藏
  |  
浏览/下载:372/0
  |  
提交时间:2022/08/13
Tire wear particles
emerging contaminant
soil health
plant-soil system
soil fauna
Jorg Rinklebe and Lena Ma
Tire wear particles: An emerging threat to soil health
期刊论文
CRITICAL REVIEWS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2022, 页码: 19
作者:
Ding, Jing
;
Lv, Min
;
Zhu, Dong
;
Leifheit, Eva F.
;
Chen, Qing-Lin
;
Wang, Yun-Qing
;
Chen, Ling-Xin
;
Rillig, Matthias C.
;
Zhu, Yong-Guan
收藏
  |  
浏览/下载:0/0
  |  
提交时间:2024/11/15
Tire wear particles
emerging contaminant
soil health
plant-soil system
soil fauna
Jorg Rinklebe and Lena Ma
食用蔬菜能吸收和积累微塑料
期刊论文
科学通报, 2019, 卷号: 64, 期号: 9, 页码: 928-934
作者:
李连祯
;
周倩
;
尹娜
;
涂晨
;
骆永明
收藏
  |  
浏览/下载:536/0
  |  
提交时间:2020/06/17
微塑料
生菜
聚苯乙烯微球
吸收
积累
健康风险
microplastics
lettuce
polystyrene microbeads
uptake
accumulation
human health risk
Microplastic (MP, 100 nm-5 mm) may present an attributable risk to ecosystem and human health, and its pollution has become a global environmental concern. Despite a wealth of information on the accumulation of MPs in aquatic species, there is no information on the uptake and accumulation of MPs by higher plants. Terrestrial edible plants are directly exposed to MPs when agricultural soil was applied with organic manure, sewage sludge as fertilizer or plastic mulching. In this paper, the uptake of two sizes of polystyrene (PS) microbeads (0.2 and 1.0 mum) and then their distribution and migration in an edible plant lettuce were firstly investigated based on laboratory experiments. We used fluorescent markers to track PS microbeads in plant tissues and found fluorescence to be a sensitive and reliable detection method. Sections from untreated control lettuce showed no autofluorescence. When roots were treated with fluorescently labeled PS microbeads, the microbeads could be identified by its fluorescence. Our main study investigated the uptake of 0.2 mum beads, as few luminescence signals were observed in lettuce roots for 1.0 mum beads in our experiment. We observed that 0.2 mum fluorescent microbeads were extracellularly trapped in the root cap mucilage (which is a highly hydrated polysaccharide) and a dark green tip (which was typical of lettuce roots exposed to label PS beads) was usually visible to the naked eye. Confocal images revealed that the PS luminescence signals were mainly located in the vascular system and on the cell walls of the cortex tissue of the roots, indicated that the beads passed through the intercellular space via the apoplastic transport system. Once inside the central cylinder, the 0.2 mum PS beads were transferred from the roots to the stems and leaves via the vascular system following the transpiration stream. We also observed that the PS beads adhered to one another and self-assembled systematically into grape-like and (chain) string-like clusters in the intercellular space of the root and stem vascular tissue of lettuce plant. In contrast to the root and stem, PS beads were dispersed in the leaf tissue. Here, for the first time we provide evidence of the adherence, uptake, accumulation, and translocation of submicrometer MPs within an edible plant. Our findings highlight the previously underappreciated human exposure pathway to MPs through the consumption of contaminated crops and emphasize the need for new management strategies to control the release of MPs waste products into the terrestrial environment. Ultimately, the potential impacts of low range sized MPs on food safety of crop plants and human health need to be urgently considered.