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Evaluating and screening the dosage-dependent bioremediation efficiency of seaweeds and a halophyte species.

Huang W, Noor Z, Tang Y, Yang Y, Shi Y

Phytoremediation

Algae and salt-tolerant plants growing in coastal ponds or runoff channels could naturally strip the fertilizer pollution that turns your local lake green and kills fish — making them a cheap, living alternative to expensive water treatment.

When too many nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus end up in water — often from fertilizer runoff — it causes algae blooms that choke out other life. This study tested whether certain seaweeds and a hardy land plant that tolerates salty conditions could soak up those nutrients like living sponges. By comparing different amounts of these plants, the researchers were looking for the sweet spot where cleanup is most efficient.

Key Findings

1

Four seaweed species and one halophyte (salt-tolerant plant) were evaluated for their ability to remove excess nutrients from enriched water bodies.

2

The study used a dosage-dependent design, meaning different quantities of each plant were tested to determine optimal biomass for maximum nutrient removal.

3

Growth rate was measured alongside nutrient absorption, indicating the researchers assessed whether the plants could sustain themselves while performing bioremediation.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Researchers tested four seaweed species and one salt-tolerant land plant to see how well they absorb excess nutrients from polluted water, and whether using more plants produces better cleanup results. The goal was to identify the most efficient natural filters for nutrient-laden waterways.

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Abstract Preview

Aquatic macrophytes play a critical role as natural bio-remediators of nutrient-enriched aquatic bodies. We aimed to evaluate the nutrient absorption efficiency and growth rate of four seaweeds (

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hub This connects to 12 other discoveries — Seaweed, Halophyte phytoremediation, water-quality, seaweed +2 more 5 related articles

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