The Status and Prospects of Phytoremediation of Heavy Metals
Aniruddha Acharya, Enrique Perez, Miller Maddox-Mandolini, Hania De, La Fuente

TL;DR
This review discusses the current status, benefits, challenges, and future prospects of phytoremediation as a sustainable method for removing heavy metals from contaminated environments, highlighting recent field studies and interdisciplinary approaches.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of phytoremediation, including mechanisms, candidate plants, influencing factors, and future directions for large-scale application.
Findings
Field studies show promising large-scale results
Interdisciplinary approaches can enhance efficiency
Physiological and molecular mechanisms are increasingly understood
Abstract
The release of heavy metals into the agricultural soil and waterbodies has been accelerated due to anthropogenic activities. They are not usually required for biological functions thus, their accumulation in biological system poses serious threat to health and environment globally. Phytoremediation offers a safe, inexpensive, and ecologically sustainable technique to clean habitats contaminated with heavy metals. Though several plants have been identified and used as a potential candidate for such phytoremediation, the technique is still at its formative stage and has been mostly confined to laboratory and greenhouses. However, recently several field studies have shown promising results that can propel large-scale implementation of this technology in industrial sites and urban agriculture. Realistically, the commercialization of this technique is possible if interdisciplinary approach…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Stress Responses and Tolerance
