Phytoremediation of Industrial and Pharmaceutical Pollutants
Author(s) -
Swarna Shikha,
Pammi Gauba
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
recent advances in biology and medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2378-654X
DOI - 10.18639/rabm.2016.02.341789
Subject(s) - phytoremediation , environmental remediation , pollutant , environmental science , pollution , contamination , soil contamination , waste management , clean up , hazardous waste , heavy metals , smelting , pesticide , environmental pollution , environmental chemistry , environmental protection , soil water , chemistry , extraction (chemistry) , engineering , ecology , organic chemistry , soil science , biology , chromatography
Pollution in water bodies and soil is a major and ever-increasing environmental issue nowadays, and most conventional remediation approaches do not provide appropriate solutions. The contamination of soil is a major concern for the environment and needs to be remediated. These pollutants include complex organic compounds, heavy metals released from industries and plants and natural products such as oils from accidental release. Further the nature of pollution will be governed by the source and type of the contaminant, and other inorganic compounds are released into the environment from a number of sources like mining, smelting, electroplating, and farming. Plants can clean up many types of contaminants like metals, pesticides, oils, and explosives. Phytoremediation is emerging as a bio-based and low-cost alternative in the cleanup of heavy metal-contaminated soils.
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