Remediation of Heavy Metals from Soil by Eco Approaches
Author(s) -
Manish Batham,
J.K. Sharma
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
recent advances in biology and medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2378-654X
DOI - 10.18639/rabm.2019.869984
Subject(s) - environmental remediation , phytoremediation , environmental science , soil contamination , heavy metals , contamination , human health , waste management , soil remediation , environmentally friendly , environmental chemistry , soil water , chemistry , engineering , ecology , soil science , biology , medicine , environmental health
The contamination of soil by anthropogenic activities is of great concern in recent times. There is an urgent demand of reliable and eco-friendly approaches for remediation of this concern. The current techniques for heavy metal remediation from contaminated soil are costly, time consuming, and harmful for the environment. Toxicity of heavy metals can reduce plant growth, and a high level of presence of these heavy metals is a risk factor to human and plant health. Heavy metals neither biodegradable materials nor are created. They occur naturally in the earth crust, and they reach the environment by human activities. Organic compounds can be degraded, but metals cannot degrade, and therefore effective cleanup requires its immobilization to reduce or remove toxicity. Recently, research focuses on cost-effective technologies to clean polluted areas. Vermiremediation and phytoremediation are two such useful techniques. In these eco-friendly techniques of remediation, the target plants accumulate, volatilize the contaminants, or convert them into some nontoxic forms, thus remediating the soil.
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