Bioremediation of Pharmaceuticals, Pesticides, and Petrochemicals with Gomeya/Cow Dung
Author(s) -
Gurpreet Kaur Randhawa,
Jagdev Singh Kullar
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
isrn pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-5173
pISSN - 2090-5165
DOI - 10.5402/2011/362459
Subject(s) - bioremediation , pollutant , environmental remediation , bioaccumulation , pesticide , petrochemical , hazardous waste , environmental chemistry , environmental science , hazardous air pollutants , waste management , environmental engineering , contamination , chemistry , biology , ecology , engineering , organic chemistry
Use and misuse of pharmaceuticals, pesticides, and petrochemicals by man is causing havoc with nature, as they persist as such or as their toxic metabolites. These pollutants bioaccumulate in environment, and they ultimately reach man through various means. They are hazardous because of potential toxicity, mutagenicity, carcinogenicity, and genotoxicity. To rejuvenate nature, remediation methods currently available are usually expensive and might convert one toxic pollutant to another. Bioremediation methods use naturally occurring microorganisms to detoxify man-made pollutants so that they change pollutants to innocuous products that make soil fertile in the process. Taking cue from Ayurveda, Gomeya/cow dung is used as an excellent bioremediation method. Thus, utilizing freely available cow dung as slurry or after composting in rural areas, is a cheap and effective measure to bioremediate the harmful pollutants. Yet, more research in this direction is warranted to bioremediate nonbiodegradable, potentially toxic pollutants.
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