Phragmites australis and Scirpus holoschoenus for metal(loid)s polluted groundwater remediation: a wetland mesocosm study with different exposure regimes.
Khan AHA, Soto-Cañas A, Rad C, Martin-Pablo A, Velasco-Arroyo B
Phytoremediation
PubMedWetland plants growing along contaminated streams or drainage ditches near old industrial sites are quietly detoxifying water that would otherwise seep into the groundwater your community depends on.
Scientists tested two common wetland plants in tanks filled with badly polluted water — so acidic and metal-laden it killed liver cells in the lab. After the plants grew in it, the water was nearly neutral in pH and far less toxic, with metal levels dropping dramatically. As a bonus, the harvested plant material can be burned or processed for energy, so nothing goes to waste.
Key Findings
Both plants corrected water pH from 3.7 (battery-acid range) to 7.6 (near-neutral) on their own.
Nickel, iron, and copper concentrations — initially up to 3,182 times above safety limits — were significantly reduced after treatment.
Cell viability in a toxicity test recovered from 0% (complete kill) to over 75% after the plants treated the water, confirming real detoxification.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Two wetland plants — common reed and round-headed clubrush — can clean up heavily metal-contaminated groundwater, restoring pH from dangerously acidic levels and reducing toxic metals like nickel, iron, and copper by thousands of times. The plants also produce biomass that can be harvested for bioenergy, turning a pollution problem into a resource.
Abstract Preview
Mitigation of pollutants is crucial for long-term sustainable management of groundwater and freshwater systems and ecosystem health. However, the potential of nature-based attenuation strategies, s...
open_in_new Read full abstract on PubMedAbstract copyright held by the original publisher.
Species Mentioned
Was this useful?
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...
Phragmites australis, known as the common reed, is a species of flowering plant in the grass family Poaceae. It is a wetland grass that can grow up to 20 feet tall and has a cosmopolitan distribution worldwide.