Search

Phytoremediation Capacity of Brassica juncea for PFAS-Contaminated Soils

Thompson K, Zhao L, Petersen D

Phytoremediation

PFAS chemicals — found in nonstick pans, firefighting foam, and food packaging — have quietly contaminated farmland and drinking water sources near you, and this research shows that a common garden plant could help clean that soil without bulldozers or toxic chemicals.

Scientists found that Indian mustard, a plant related to the mustard you put on your sandwich, can absorb a harmful 'forever chemical' from polluted soil and store it in its leaves. By growing and harvesting two rounds of the plant, they removed almost all of the chemical from the soil. The plant pulls the toxin up from the roots and concentrates it in the parts above ground, making it easy to remove just by cutting and disposing of the plant.

Key Findings

1

Indian mustard removed 73% of PFOS from contaminated soil in a single 90-day greenhouse trial

2

The plant concentrated the chemical in its shoot tissue at 12.4 times the soil concentration, making harvest-based removal practical

3

Two sequential planting cycles achieved 94% total PFOS removal from the soil

chevron_right Technical Summary

Indian mustard plants can pull a toxic industrial chemical called PFOS out of contaminated soil with high efficiency — removing 73% in a single growing cycle and up to 94% with two sequential plantings. This points to a low-cost, plant-based cleanup strategy for one of the most persistent pollutants on earth.

description

Abstract Preview

Indian mustard demonstrated 73% PFOS removal from contaminated soil over 90 days in greenhouse trials. Accumulation was concentrated in shoot tissue (bioconcentration factor 12.4), suggesting harve...

open_in_new Read full abstract

Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 13 other discoveries — Indian Mustard phytoremediation, soil-health, urban-ecology +4 more 5 related articles

Species Mentioned

Was this useful?

mail Weekly plant science — one email, Saturdays.

Share: X/Twitter Reddit
arrow_forward Next Discovery

Urban Tree Canopy Reduces Heat-Related Mortality by 39% in European Cities

Trees in your local park or street aren't just pretty — they are literally keeping people alive during heatwaves, and planting even a modest number of the ri...