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This book provides an overview to researchers, graduate, and
undergraduate students, as well as academicians who are interested
in arsenic. It covers human health risks and established cases of
human ailments and sheds light on prospective control measures,
both biological and physico-chemical. Arsenic (As) is a widely
distributed element in the environment having no known useful
physiological function in plants or animals. Historically, this
metalloid has been known to be used widely as a poison. Effects of
arsenic have come to light in the past few decades due to its
increasing contamination in several parts of world, with the worst
situation being in Bangladesh and West Bengal, India. The worrying
issue is the ingestion of arsenic through water and food and
associated health risks due to its carcinogenic and neurotoxic
nature. The impact of the problem is widespread, and it has led to
extensive research on finding both the causes and solutions. These
attempts have allowed us to understand the various probable causes
of arsenic contamination in the environment, and at the same time,
have provided a number of possible solutions. It is reported that
more than 200 mineral species contain As. Generally, As binds with
iron and sulfur to form arsenopyrite. According to one estimate
from the World Health Organization (WHO), contextual levels of As
in soil ranges from 1 to 40 mg kg-1. Arsenic toxicity is related to
its oxidation state which is present in the medium. As is a
protoplastic toxin, due to its consequence on sulphydryl group it
interferes in cell enzymes, cell respiration and in mitosis.
Exposure of As may occur to humans via several industries, such as
refining or smelting of metal ores, microelectronics, wood
preservation, battery manufacturing, and also to those who work in
power plants that burn arsenic-rich coal.
Phytoremediation is an emerging technology that employs higher
plants for the clean-up of contaminated environments. Basic and
applied research have unequivocally demonstrated that selected
plant species possess the genetic potential to accumulate, degrade,
metabolize and immobilize a wide range of contaminants. The main
focus of this volume is on the recent advances of technologies
using green plants for remediation of various metals and
metalloids. Topics include biomonitoring of heavy metal pollution,
amendments of higher uptake of toxic metals, transport of heavy
metals in plants, and toxicity mechanisms. Further chapters discuss
agro-technological methods for minimizing pollution while improving
soil quality, transgenic approaches to heavy metal remediation and
present protocols for metal remediation via in vitro root cultures.
This book provides an overview to researchers, graduate, and
undergraduate students, as well as academicians who are interested
in arsenic. It covers human health risks and established cases of
human ailments and sheds light on prospective control measures,
both biological and physico-chemical. Arsenic (As) is a widely
distributed element in the environment having no known useful
physiological function in plants or animals. Historically, this
metalloid has been known to be used widely as a poison. Effects of
arsenic have come to light in the past few decades due to its
increasing contamination in several parts of world, with the worst
situation being in Bangladesh and West Bengal, India. The worrying
issue is the ingestion of arsenic through water and food and
associated health risks due to its carcinogenic and neurotoxic
nature. The impact of the problem is widespread, and it has led to
extensive research on finding both the causes and solutions. These
attempts have allowed us to understand the various probable causes
of arsenic contamination in the environment, and at the same time,
have provided a number of possible solutions. It is reported that
more than 200 mineral species contain As. Generally, As binds with
iron and sulfur to form arsenopyrite. According to one estimate
from the World Health Organization (WHO), contextual levels of As
in soil ranges from 1 to 40 mg kg-1. Arsenic toxicity is related to
its oxidation state which is present in the medium. As is a
protoplastic toxin, due to its consequence on sulphydryl group it
interferes in cell enzymes, cell respiration and in mitosis.
Exposure of As may occur to humans via several industries, such as
refining or smelting of metal ores, microelectronics, wood
preservation, battery manufacturing, and also to those who work in
power plants that burn arsenic-rich coal.
This book focuses on the mechanistic (microscopic) understanding of
radionuclide uptake by plants in contaminated soils and potential
use of phytoremediation. The key features concern radionuclide
toxicity in plants, how the radioactive materials are absorbed by
plants, and how the plants cope with the toxic responses. The
respective chapters examine soil classification, natural plant
selection, speciation of actinides, kinetic modeling, and case
studies on cesium uptake after radiation accidents. Radionuclide
contaminants pose serious problems for biological systems, due to
their chemical toxicity and radiological effects. The processes by
which radionuclides can be incorporated into vegetation can either
originate from activity interception by external plant surfaces
(either directly from the atmosphere or from resuspended material),
or through uptake of radionuclides via the root system. Subsequent
transfer of toxic elements to the human food chain is a concrete
danger. Therefore, the molecular mechanisms and genetic basis of
transport into and within plants needs to be understood for two
reasons: The effectiveness of radionuclide uptake into crop plants
– so-called transfer coefficient – is a prerequisite for the
calculation of dose due to the food path. On the other hand,
efficient radionuclide transfer into plants can be made use of for
decontamination of land – so-called phytoremediation, the direct
use of living, green plants for in situ removal of pollutants from
the environment or to reduce their concentrations to harmless
levels.
Phytoremediation is an emerging technology that employs higher
plants for the clean-up of contaminated environments. Basic and
applied research have unequivocally demonstrated that selected
plant species possess the genetic potential to accumulate, degrade,
metabolize and immobilize a wide range of contaminants. The main
focus of this volume is on the recent advances of technologies
using green plants for remediation of various metals and
metalloids. Topics include biomonitoring of heavy metal pollution,
amendments of higher uptake of toxic metals, transport of heavy
metals in plants, and toxicity mechanisms. Further chapters discuss
agro-technological methods for minimizing pollution while improving
soil quality, transgenic approaches to heavy metal remediation and
present protocols for metal remediation via in vitro root cultures.
Plants have a very specific and efficient mechanism to obtain,
translocate and store nutrients from the surrounding environment.
The precise mechanism that helps a plant in nutrient translocation
from root to shoot also, in the same way, transfers and stores
toxic metals within their structure. Metal toxicity generally
causes multiple direct or indirect effects on plants, affecting
nearly all of their physiological functions. Plant tolerance to
heavy metals depends largely on plant efficiency in uptake,
translocation and sequestration of heavy metals in specific cell
organelles or specialized tissues. The main purpose of this book is
to present a holistic view of the recent advancement in the field
of accumulation and remediation using plants, the green solar
powered alternative to ameliorate heavy metal from the polluted
environment. The key features of the book are related to metal
transporters and metal accumulation mechanisms under heavy metal
stress in plants, plant transcriptional regulation and responses
under metal contamination, multiple toxic metal contaminations and
its phytoremediation approaches etc. Based on the advancement of
research in recent years, the information compiled in this book
will bring an in-depth knowledge on the bioaccumulation of metals,
their transportation in natural conditions or genetically modified
plants and their strategy to cope with the toxicity to survive in
the hostile environment.
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