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Bioremediation of metals and radionuclides: What it is and How itWorks
Author(s) -
Joel Emery McCullough,
Terry C. Hazen,
Sally Benson
Publication year - 1999
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/876715
Subject(s) - bioremediation , biostimulation , bioaugmentation , environmental science , hazardous waste , waste management , contamination , microorganism , environmental chemistry , chemistry , engineering , biology , ecology , bacteria , genetics
This primer is intended for people interested in DOE environmental problems and in their potential solutions. It will specifically look at some of the more hazardous metal and radionuclide contaminants found on DOE lands and at the possibilities for using bioremediation technology to clean up these contaminants. Bioremediation is a technology that can be used to reduce, eliminate, or contain hazardous waste. Over the past two decades, it has become widely accepted that microorganisms, and to a lesser extent plants, can transform and degrade many types of contaminants. These transformation and degradation processes vary, depending on physical environment, microbial communities, and nature of contaminant. This technology includes intrinsic bioremediation, which relies on naturally occurring processes, and accelerated bioremediation, which enhances microbial degradation or transformation through inoculation with microorganisms (bioaugmentation) or the addition of nutrients (biostimulation)

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