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Use of Bio-Resources for Remediation of Soil Pollution
Author(s) -
Sharmistha Pal,
A. K. Patra,
Selim Reza,
Walter Wildi,
John Poté
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
natural resources
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2158-7086
pISSN - 2158-706X
DOI - 10.4236/nr.2010.12012
Subject(s) - environmental science , environmental remediation , agriculture , environmental protection , pollution , soil contamination , environmental planning , ecosystem services , heavy metals , natural resource economics , soil water , ecosystem , contamination , ecology , environmental chemistry , chemistry , biology , soil science , economics
In recent years, economic boom in fast developing countries has been witnessed with spectacular progress in industri- alization and concurrent progress in modern agriculture. Such development is however not without any socio-political and environmental side effects. A major concern has been the environmental pollution. If the current unabated disposal of various forms of wastes to agricultural lands is continued, the inherent capacity of soil to support agricultural pro- duction and sustain other ecosystem services will be in peril. Heavy metals with soil residence times of thousands of years present numerous health hazards to higher organisms. They are also known to decrease plant growth, ground cover and have a negative impact on soil biodiversity. Inorganic and organic contaminants typically found in urban areas are heavy metals and petroleum derived products. The presence of both types of contaminants on the same site presents technical and economic challenges for decontamination strategies. In this article we have reviewed the devel- opments to ameliorate the contaminated soils, with special emphasis on biological approaches, which have shown po- tential to low-cost remediation of soil pollution. Also the limitations of such approaches and direction of further re- search have been highlighted

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