Phytoremediation, Bioaugmentation, and the Plant Microbiome

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Abstract

Understanding plant biology and related microbial ecology as a means to phytoremediate soil and groundwater contamination has broadened and advanced the field of environmental engineering and science over the past 30 years. Using plants to transform and degrade xenobiotic organic pollutants delivers new methods for environmental restoration. Manipulations of the plant microbiome through bioaugmentation, endophytes, adding various growth factors, genetic modification, and/or selecting the microbial community via insertion of probiotics or phages for gene transfer are future areas of research to further expand this green, cost-effective, aesthetically pleasing technology phytoremediation.

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APA

Simmer, R. A., & Schnoor, J. L. (2022, December 6). Phytoremediation, Bioaugmentation, and the Plant Microbiome. Environmental Science and Technology. American Chemical Society. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.2c05970

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