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Effects of Manufactured Nanoparticles
updated: Aug 20, 2012, 12:11 PM
Source: UCSB
Sunscreens, lotions, and cosmetics contain tiny metal nanoparticles that wash
down the drain at the end of the day, or are discharged after manufacturing.
Those nanoparticles eventually end up in agricultural soil, which is a cause for
concern, according to a group of environmental scientists that recently carried
out the first major study of soybeans grown in soil contaminated by two
manufactured nanomaterials (MNMs).
The team was led by scientists at UC Santa Barbara's Bren School for
Environmental Science & Management. The team is also affiliated with the UC
Center for Environmental Implications of Nanotechnology (CEIN), a $24 million
collaboration based at UCLA, with researchers from UCSB, UC Davis, UC Riverside,
University of Texas at El Paso, Columbia University, and other national and
international partners. The results of the study are published this week in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"Our society has become more environmentally aware in the last few decades, and
that results in our government and scientists asking questions about the safety
of new types of chemical ingredients," said senior author Patricia Holden, a
professor with the Bren School. "That's reflected by this type of research."
She explained that the research, which is funded by the National Science
Foundation (NSF) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), is helping
to discover potential environmental implications of a new industry that includes
nanomaterials. The ultimate goal is to help find more environmentally compatible
substitutes, Holden said.
Soybean was chosen for the study due to its importance as a food crop -- it is
the fifth largest crop in global agricultural production and second in the U.S.
-- and because it is vulnerable to MNMs. The findings showed that crop yield and
quality are affected by the addition of MNMs to the soil.
The scientists studied the effects of two common nanoparticles, zinc oxide and
cerium oxide, on soybeans grown in soil in greenhouses. Zinc oxide is used in
cosmetics, lotions, and sunscreens. Cerium oxide is used as an ingredient in
catalytic converters to minimize carbon monoxide production, and in fuel to
increase fuel combustion. Cerium can enter soil through the atmosphere when fuel
additives are released with diesel fuel combustion.
The zinc oxide nanoparticles may dissolve, or they may remain as a particle, or
re-form as a particle, as they are processed through wastewater treatment. At
the final stage of wastewater treatment there is a solid material, called
biosolids, which is applied to soils in many parts of the U.S. This solid
material fertilizes the soil, returning nitrogen and phosphorus that are
captured during wastewater treatment. This is also a point at which zinc oxide
and cerium oxide can enter the soil.
The scientists noted that the EPA requires pretreatment programs to limit direct
industrial metal discharge into publicly owned wastewater treatment plants.
However, the research team conveyed that "MNMs -- while measurable in the
wastewater treatment plant systems -- are neither monitored nor regulated, have
a high affinity for activated sludge bacteria, and thus concentrate in
biosolids."
The authors pointed out that soybean crops are farmed with equipment powered by
fossil fuels, and thus MNMs can also be deposited into the soil through exhaust.
The study showed that soybean plants grown in soil that contained zinc oxide
bioaccumulated zinc; they absorbed it into the stems, leaves, and beans. Food
quality was affected, although it may not be harmful to humans to eat the
soybeans if the zinc is in the form of ions or salts, in the plants, according
to Holden.
In the case of cerium oxide, the nanoparticles did not bioaccumulate, but plant
growth was stunted. Changes occurred in the root nodules, where symbiotic
bacteria normally accumulate and convert atmospheric nitrogen into ammonium,
which fertilizes the plant. The changes in the root nodules indicate that
greater use of synthetic fertilizers might be necessary with the buildup of MNMs
in the soil.
Holden commented on the likelihood of high concentrations of these nanoparticles
in agriculture: "There could be hotspots, places where you have accumulation,
including near manufacturing sites where the materials are being made, or if
there are spills. We have very limited information about the quantity or state
of these synthetic nanomaterials in the environment right now. We know they're
being used in consumer goods, and we know they're going down the drain."
First author John H. Priester is a staff scientist in the Holden lab at UCSB.
Other co-authors from UC CEIN are Yuan Ge, Randall E. Mielke, Allison M. Horst,
Shelly Cole Moritz, Roger M. Nisbet, Joshua P. Schimel, Jose A. Hernandez-
Viezcas, Lijuan Zhao, and Jorge L. Gardea-Torresdey. Co-authors Katherine
Espinosa and Reid G. Palmer are affiliated with Iowa State University; Jeff Gelb
is affiliated with Xradia Corporation; and Sharon L. Walker is with UC
Riverside. NASA/JPL-Caltech, the USDA, and The University of Texas at El Paso
were substantially involved in the research.
Comments in order of when they were received | (reverse order)
COMMENT 310535
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2012-08-20 04:28 PM |
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Sometimes it seems like everything we do has a potentially harmful side effect. Is that the paradox of the modern world or something? And we don't seem to be very good about evaluating the possible impacts of what we do before we do it, either. Well, we are generally very good once we go into crisis mode. I wonder how soon we will get there?
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SEEDLADY
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2012-08-21 06:50 AM |
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we has seen the enemy and it is us... to misquote Pogo
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COMMENT 310683P
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2012-08-21 08:28 AM |
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Nanoparticles also come from cosmetics like facial scrubs and are harmful to krill and other animals in the ocean food chain.
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FLICKA
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2012-08-21 04:54 PM |
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Seems we're working pretty hard to destroy our habitat and make our food toxic.
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