Nature-based Solutions to Wastewater Treatment of Microplastics: Technologies, Challenges, and Prospects
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Microplastic pollution has emerged as a serious societal concern, posing risks to the environment, human health, and economies. Conventional wastewater treatment processes remove microplastics at various levels from physical removal (primary), biological degradation (secondary), and contaminant-specific removal (tertiary treatment). Nature-based solutions (NbS) offer an ecologically friendly alternative that utilizes nature to wastewater treatment. This study provides an overview of the sources and impacts of microplastic pollution, NbS technologies for microplastic removal, challenges and prospects in utilizing NbS, and the knowledge gaps. Primary sources of microplastics are intentionally produced at microscopic sizes, while secondary sources originate from the disintegration of larger plastic debris. Among the NbS technologies are constructed wetlands (horizontal subsurface flow, vertical flow, surface flow, microbial fuel cells, multistage) with up to 100% efficiency; green infrastructures (bioretention systems, green walls, permeable pavements, retention ponds) with up to 99% efficiency; macrophytes and microphytes with up to 94% microplastic removal rate. Despite the ecosystem services provided by NbS, they are challenged by the decrease in efficiency in removing other contaminants, detection and evaluation of NbS performance, and non-technical factors (operations and maintenance, public acceptance, climate risks, financing). The findings present insights on further research and implications for the successful adoption of NbS to wastewater treatment.