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Coastal plant's cadmium defenses could help clean toxic soil

Phytoremediation

The scrubby succulent creeping along beach dunes and salt flats turns out to be a natural detox machine that scientists could harness to pull heavy metal pollution out of contaminated soil near your community.

Sea purslane is a hardy, salt-loving plant that grows along coastlines and mudflats. Researchers found that it has built-in biological tools, both in how it functions physically and in which genes switch on, that let it soak up and tolerate cadmium, a toxic heavy metal that's dangerous to most other plants and to people. Understanding these tools could help scientists breed or engineer plants that clean up contaminated soil.

Key Findings

1

Sesuvium portulacastrum shows measurable physiological tolerance mechanisms when exposed to cadmium stress

2

Transcriptomic analysis identified specific gene expression changes linked to cadmium detoxification and tolerance pathways

3

Findings suggest the species has strong potential as a candidate for phytoremediation of cadmium-contaminated soils

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists studied how sea purslane, a salt-tolerant coastal plant, survives high levels of toxic cadmium in soil, finding genetic and physiological tricks that could help clean up polluted land.

hub This connects to 10 other discoveries — Sea purslane phytoremediation, climate-adaptation, soil-health +1 more 5 related articles

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