A timely revival of this
thread!
It is probably worth bringing up that the widespread finding of
PFAS in toilet paper is likely the canary in the coal mine indicating that the recycled paper pulp stream is heavily contaminated. Paper-based food packaging often contains PFAS to prevent grease and liquids seeping through -- when these items enter the paper pulp stream, they are adding to the base load.
The litany of potential negative health effects from consuming PFAS is considerable, and this could be a reason to stop using
cardboard in the garden -- particularly pizza boxes, but possibly other types as well.
I do personally use cardboard even so, but as a single application to suppress some of the extremely aggressive grasses we have here while establishing garden paths (not in the main garden beds themselves). I also make sure to never use color-printed cardboard, as the inks are still soy-based, but the pigments often contain lead (white, red, green), mercury (red), cadmium (red, yellow) and copper (blue, green) -- only black ink is relatively safe. Given that cardboard is a recycled material, it will have some quantity of these heavy metals from its recycled post-consumer portion. Use with caution!