Research Keyword: soil pollution

Bioremediation Potential of Indigenous Bacterial Isolates for Treating Petroleum Hydrocarbons-Induced Environmental Pollution

Scientists isolated three types of bacteria from soil near auto repair shops that can break down petroleum oil pollutants. When tested in the laboratory, these bacteria degraded between 55-83% of petroleum hydrocarbons over 12 days by converting them into simpler compounds. These findings suggest these naturally occurring bacteria could offer an affordable and environmentally-friendly way to clean up oil-contaminated soil without the harmful side effects of chemical cleanup methods.

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Current state of the heavy metal pollution, microbial diversity, and bioremediation experiments around the Qixia Mountain lead–zinc mine in Nanjing, China

A lead-zinc mine in Nanjing, China has contaminated surrounding soils with dangerous heavy metals like lead, zinc, and cadmium over 70 years of operation. Researchers discovered that combining amaranth plants with a beneficial bacterium called Bacillus velezensis dramatically reduced heavy metal pollution in soil, lowering pollution levels from severely contaminated to acceptable levels. This plant-microorganism approach also improved plant growth while reducing heavy metal uptake in the edible parts of crops, offering a practical solution to make farmland around mines safer for growing food.

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