The study found that microplastic pollution reduces photosynthesis efficiency by 7-12% in plants and algae, primarily by decreasing chlorophyll levels by 11-13%. Smaller microplastics (≤100 nm) have a greater impact because they can penetrate cells more easily, disrupting energy production, increasing oxidative stress, and interfering with key photosynthetic enzymes. Additionally, microplastics create shading effects that further limit light absorption.
The biological effects of microplastic pollution lead to significant economic risks. Annual reductions in global food production due to microplastic exposure are estimated at:
These losses have direct implications for global food security. The research projects that microplastic-induced crop reductions could contribute to a rise in hunger-prone populations between 2030 and 2050. Statistical analysis, including heterogeneity quantification and sensitivity testing, confirmed the robustness of these findings, ruling out significant publication bias.
The study presents actionable strategies to mitigate the problem. Researchers found that reducing environmental microplastics by 13% could lower photosynthesis losses by 30%, potentially preventing annual losses of 22-115 million metric tons in crop production and 0.3-7.4 million metric tons in seafood harvests.
To achieve these reductions, the study outlines several key mitigation strategies:
The findings reinforce the need for integrating plastic reduction initiatives into global food security and sustainability strategies. Businesses and policymakers must take coordinated action to address microplastic pollution and safeguard the resilience of agricultural and aquatic food systems in the coming decades.