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Assessment of phyto-remediation efficiency and crop productivity of castor-based rice mill effluent (RME) wetland system.

Das A, Sathya R, Mallick RK

Phytoremediation

If you've ever wondered whether a fast-growing plant could do double duty — cleaning fouled water while producing harvestable seed — castor's performance in these rice mill runoff trials is the proof-of-concept that makes that vision real.

Rice mills produce large amounts of dirty wastewater full of nutrients and organic matter that can harm the environment. Researchers planted castor — a fast-growing oil-seed plant — in specially designed wetland beds and flushed this wastewater through them. The castor plants thrived on the nutrient-rich water, cleaned it up significantly, and produced four times more seeds than plants grown in normal soil.

Key Findings

1

50% diluted rice mill effluent removed 65–72% of nitrogen compounds and over 70% of organic pollutants (COD/BOD) from wastewater.

2

Castor seed yield increased fourfold (from 22 g to 91 g per plant) and harvest index reached 60.6% when grown in effluent-enriched soils.

3

Soil microbial health improved markedly, with a 77% increase in microbial biomass carbon and 76% rise in dehydrogenase activity, indicating enhanced soil fertility.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Castor plants grown in constructed wetlands can clean up polluted rice mill wastewater while producing useful biomass — achieving both environmental cleanup and crop yield simultaneously. At 50% effluent dilution, castor removed up to 72% of nitrogen compounds and 70%+ of organic pollutants, while seed yields quadrupled.

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Abstract Preview

For major paddy producing countries like India, rice mill effluent (RME) poses a persistent environmental challenge by dint of its high organic and nutrient loads. Among various methods of treatmen...

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hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — Castor phytoremediation, soil-health, crop-improvement +2 more 5 related articles

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