|
A critical review on occurrence, distribution, environmental
impacts and biodegradation of microplastics
G.P.
Avinash, S. Karthick Raja Namasivayam* and R.S. Arvind Bharani
Department
of Research & Innovation, Saveetha School of Engineering, Institute of
Medical and Technical Sciences, Chennai-602 105, India
*Corresponding
Author Email : biologiask@gmail.com
*ORCiD: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2894-1905
|
|
|
Abstract
Microplastics are
small plastic particles (<5mm) linked by hydrocarbon atoms. Microplastics
are of two types: primary microplastics, which are inadvertently released
into the ecosystem as microbeads, plastic pellets and plastic fibres and
secondary microplastics, derived from primary microplastics, when
macroplastics get decomposed in the presence of UV light or weathering.
Sources of contamination by microplastics can be classified as Terrestrial
sources and Aquatic Sources. Microplastics are widespread in diverse
ecosystems and are spread in different parts of the world, like India, China,
Brazil and Malaysia.
Recent
studies have revealed the toxic effects of microplastics on various biotic
and abiotic components. Microplastics can be completely removed from the soil
by microbial biodegradation, most preferably bacteria, actinobacteria and
fungi. Bacteria, the recurring group of microbes, can degrade pollutants.
Actinobacteria, a commonly occurring Gram-positive bacterium, degrade polymer
accumulation. Followed by bacteria, fungi are a major group of microorganisms
known to degrade microplastics. The current review deals with the type of
plastics, their sources, distribution, environmental impacts and degradation
using biological methods, preferably microbes, which would further help in
understanding the microplastic-mediated adverse effects' molecular mechanism
and their removal from the environment using Green Technology.
Key words: Biodegradation, Microbes, Microplastics, Toxicity
|
|
|
Copyright
© 2023 Triveni Enterprises. All rights reserved. No part of the
Journal can be reproduced in any form without prior
permission. Responsibility regarding the authenticity of the data, and
the acceptability of the conclusions enforced or derived, rest completely
with the author(s).
|
|