Evaluation of phytoremediation potential by rhizospheric bacteria of
Singh K, Iqbal MZ, Chandra R
Phytoremediation
Contaminated soil from industrial runoff or heavy metals can end up in the vegetables you grow or the parks your kids play in — and this research points toward using living plants plus their root bacteria as a cheap, natural way to detoxify that ground.
Some plants can absorb harmful pollutants from soil through their roots — a process called phytoremediation. This study found that certain bacteria living right around those roots can make the plants even better at this job. It's like giving the plant a microbial partner that helps it work harder at cleaning up the dirt.
Key Findings
Rhizospheric bacteria were shown to enhance the phytoremediation capacity of the study plant beyond what the plant could achieve alone
The root-zone bacterial community appears to play a functional role in mobilizing or uptake of soil contaminants
Specific bacterial strains were identified as candidates for inoculation to improve remediation outcomes (exact species/data not available due to truncated abstract)
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers investigated how bacteria living in plant root zones can boost a plant's ability to pull contaminants out of polluted soil. The study evaluated whether specific rhizospheric bacteria strains meaningfully improve phytoremediation efficiency, offering a potential low-cost, nature-based cleanup strategy.
Abstract Preview
This study investigates the role of rhizospheric bacteria in enhancing the phytoremediation capacity of
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