Research Keyword: bioremediation

Electroactive Bacteria in Natural Ecosystems and Their Applications in Microbial Fuel Cells for Bioremediation: A Review

Electroactive bacteria are special microorganisms found in soil, water, and sediment that can generate electrical current. Scientists are harnessing these bacteria in microbial fuel cells to simultaneously clean contaminated water and produce electricity. These systems can remove pollution including heavy metals and antibiotics while generating renewable energy, offering a green solution for environmental cleanup and power generation.

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Genomic analysis of Acinetobacter baumannii DUEMBL6 reveals diesel bioremediation potential and biosafety concerns

Researchers isolated bacteria from diesel-contaminated soils in Bangladesh that can break down diesel fuel efficiently. The best strain, Acinetobacter baumannii DUEMBL6, degraded about 41% of diesel in laboratory tests through multiple enzymatic pathways. However, this bacteria also carries genes for antibiotic resistance and virulence factors, making it both a promising environmental solution and a potential health risk that requires careful monitoring before field application.

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Systematic Evaluation of Biodegradation of Azo Dyes by Microorganisms: Efficient Species, Physicochemical Factors, and Enzymatic Systems

Azo dyes used in textiles and fashion contaminate water supplies and pose health risks including cancer potential. This research review shows that certain microorganisms like specific fungi and bacteria can break down these harmful dyes into less toxic substances through natural enzymatic processes. By optimizing conditions like pH and temperature, and using combinations of different microbes, scientists have achieved degradation rates up to 90%, offering an eco-friendly and cost-effective alternative to traditional chemical treatment methods.

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Multi-metal-resistant Staphylococcus warneri strain TWSL_1: revealing heavy metal-resistant genomic features by whole-genome sequencing and analysis

Scientists discovered a special type of bacteria called Staphylococcus warneri TWSL_1 from textile factory wastewater that can survive and remove dangerous heavy metals like lead, cadmium, and copper from contaminated water. By analyzing the bacteria’s complete genetic code, researchers identified specific genes that help this bacteria resist and detoxify these toxic metals. This discovery suggests the bacteria could be used as a natural cleaning solution to remove heavy metal pollution from industrial wastewater, offering an eco-friendly alternative to current cleanup methods.

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Exploring the Potential and Evaluating Hydrocarbon Degradation by Novel Antarctic Dietzia and Pusillimonas Isolates From a Pristine Environment

Scientists discovered two types of bacteria living in an Antarctic pond that can break down crude oil and petroleum contamination. These bacteria can survive in very cold conditions and harsh environments. Testing showed they could degrade about 79% of crude oil in laboratory conditions and improved cleanup processes in contaminated soil samples. This research suggests these Antarctic bacteria could be useful tools for cleaning up oil-polluted sites, especially in cold regions of the world.

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Large-scale phenotyping of 1,000 fungal strains for the degradation of non-natural, industrial compounds

Scientists tested over 1,000 different fungi to see which ones could break down human-made pollutants like industrial dyes, plastics, and paper waste. They found that different types of fungi are good at degrading different pollutants, with wood-decaying fungi being particularly useful. This research suggests that fungi could be engineered to help clean up environmental pollution caused by industry and human activities.

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Biological approaches to mitigate heavy metal pollution from battery production effluents: advances, challenges, and perspectives

Battery factories produce dirty water containing harmful heavy metals like lead and cadmium. Instead of using expensive chemical treatments, scientists are finding natural ways to clean this water using plants, bacteria, and other living organisms. These biological methods can remove up to 99% of the metals and are better for the environment. This review examines all these natural cleaning methods and suggests ways to make battery production cleaner and safer.

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A Biorefinery Approach Integrating Lipid and EPS Augmentation Along with Cr (III) Mitigation by Chlorella minutissima

This research demonstrates that a common freshwater microalga called Chlorella minutissima can effectively remove toxic chromium from contaminated water while simultaneously producing high-quality biodiesel fuel and useful plant compounds. The microalga survives chromium exposure by activating powerful internal defense systems that protect it from oxidative stress. This integrated approach offers a sustainable solution to environmental contamination while generating renewable energy, supporting the transition to a circular economy.

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Water Quality Degradation Due to Heavy Metal Contamination: Health Impacts and Eco-Friendly Approaches for Heavy Metal Remediation

Heavy metals from factories, farms, and waste contaminate our drinking water and cause serious health problems like kidney damage and cancer. Traditional chemical methods to clean this water are expensive and create more pollution. Scientists are discovering that certain bacteria and plant materials can remove heavy metals naturally and cheaply, offering a sustainable solution to protect public health.

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Breaking Down Linear Low-Density Polyethylene (LLDPE) Using Fungal Mycelium (Part A): A Path Towards Sustainable Waste Management and Its Possible Economic Impacts

Researchers discovered that certain fungi, especially Schizophyllum commune, can effectively break down plastic waste called LLDPE through their natural enzymes. In laboratory tests, this fungus degraded plastic about 20 times faster than samples without fungal treatment over 30 days. This fungal approach is cheaper and more environmentally friendly than traditional methods like incineration or landfilling, and could help solve plastic pollution while creating jobs and using agricultural waste productively.

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