Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Bioremediation can be defined as any process that uses microorganisms,fungi, green plants or their enzymes to return the natural environment altered by ...
Increasingly, in situ bioremediation is being heralded as a promising ''new" alternative ground water cleanup technology. In fact, however, bioremediation is not new. It has been used commercially for ...
The soil ecosystem is increasingly threatened by microplastic (MP) contamination (<5 mm), recognized among the top ten global environmental hazards by UNEP (2016). Despite mounting concern, the ...
Revisiting the remediation of arsenic-contaminated agricultural soil: a review of real-world testing
Agricultural soil affected by metal(loid) contaminants not only endangers food safety but also causes environmental pollution and soil health degradation. Unlike ...
There are many ways oil or petroleum hydrocarbons end up in the waterways, such as offshore rig accidents and pipeline ruptures. With water traffic increasing, oil spills from the overturned ships and ...
The United States is investing billions of dollars in cleaning up polluted ground water and soils, yet this large investment may not be producing the benefits that citizens expect. Recent studies have ...
Humans have an impact on the world around them. From greenhouse emissions to the waste and pollution we produce every day, the activity of each person and communities and nations as a whole has ...
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