Search
← Back to Discoveries | PubMed 2026-04-09 synthesized

Biodegradation of chlorpyrifos by the newly isolated Escherichia fergusonii and Clostridium bifermentans: Identification and growth optimization for bioremediation.

Lagiso TL, Woldesemayat AA, Gemta ZB

Bioremediation

PubMed

Pesticides sprayed on crops can linger in soil and water long after harvest, potentially ending up in the vegetables you eat or the streams near your favorite park — and these bacteria offer a way to neutralize that threat naturally.

Researchers found two types of bacteria living in Ethiopian farm soil that can eat and break down a common but dangerous pesticide called chlorpyrifos. They tested these bacteria in a lab and found one could eliminate nearly 60% of the pesticide, while the other wiped out over 70%. This discovery is exciting because using bacteria to clean up pollution is cheap, natural, and doesn't create new toxic byproducts.

Key Findings

1

Escherichia fergusonii degraded 59.34% of chlorpyrifos at 50 mg/L concentration

2

Clostridium bifermentans degraded 70.82% of chlorpyrifos at 50 mg/L concentration

3

Both bacterial strains are newly reported chlorpyrifos degraders, identified via 16S rRNA sequencing and confirmed by GC-MS analysis

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists in Ethiopia discovered two bacteria that can break down chlorpyrifos, a harmful pesticide widely used in agriculture despite restrictions. These microbes degraded up to 70% of the pesticide, offering a natural cleanup method for contaminated soil and water.

description

Abstract Preview

Chlorpyrifos, widely used in Ethiopia despite restricted official status, contaminates soil and water, posing environmental and health risks. Microbial bioremediation offers a natural, eco-friendly...

open_in_new Read full abstract on PubMed

Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 9 other discoveries — bioremediation, soil-health, pesticide-degradation +1 more 5 related articles

Was this useful?

mail Get weekly plant science discoveries — one email, every Saturday.

Share: X/Twitter Reddit
arrow_forward Next Discovery

Ancient DNA Reveals Pre-Columbian Amazonian Forest Management at Scale

Forests and fruits we romanticize as wild — including many plants now in our kitchens and gardens — may exist in their current abundance precisely because an...