Bioremediation of Contaminated Soil in Agriculture
A special issue of Agronomy (ISSN 2073-4395). This special issue belongs to the section "Farming Sustainability".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 August 2020) | Viewed by 6618
Special Issue Editors
Interests: environmental pollution; water quality; environment; wastewater treatment; environmental impact assessment; water and wastewater treatment; environmental analysis; environmental monitoring; water treatment; environment protection
Interests: environmental biotechnology; applied microbial ecology; plant-soil microbe interactions; phytoremediation; bioremediation
Interests: DNA amplification; RNA analysis; molecular biological techniques; electrophoresis; PCR; cloning; BOD; microbiology techniques; bioremediation; DNA fingerprints
Special Issue Information
Dear colleagues,
While modern agriculture benefits humankind by producing more crops and foods it has also led to contaminate agriculture lands with thousands of chemicals. Tonnes of pesticides, herbicides and fungicides are used by farmers globally. In addition, fuel spills and other activities involving heavy machinery in modern agriculture have polluted agricultural lands with petroleum hydrocarbons. Many of these compounds enter the food chain and enter local groundwater, threatening lives and environments. It has been shown that many of these compounds are potentially harmful and hazardous, so there is an urgent need to remove them from the environment.
Cleaning polluted agricultural soils offer unique challenges as the soil represents a valuable resource and approaches to removing the contaminant should allow the subsequent reuse of the soil. Currently there are a number of current techniques used too treat contaminated agricultural soils including physico-chemical and biological approaches (bioremediation). Physico-chemical methods are expensive, labour intense and prone to secondary contaminations, making reuse often difficult to achieve. Bioremediation, or using microbes and other living organisms for the degradation or clean-up of pollution is a promising technology in this regard. In recent years, the application of advanced techniques such as nanotechnology have also led to improvements the remediation efficiency. In addition the ability to investigate the diversity and activity of the soil microbial community using high throughput sequencing has revolutionised our understaning of the response of the microbial community to both contamination and treatment.
This Special Issue will focus on “Bioremediation of Contaminated Soil in Agriculture”. We welcome novel research, reviews and opinion pieces covering all related topics including remediation of agricultural soils contaminated with pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, beneficial microorganisms in bioremediation, assessments of microbial communities in polluted agricultural lands, management solutions, modelling and case-studies from the field.
Prof. Dr. Andrew S. Ball
Dr. Esmaeil Shahsavari
Dr. Arturo Aburto Medina
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- agricultural soil contamination
- agricultural soils
- bacterial degradation of conmtaminants
- bioremediation
- next generation sequencing
- soil remediation
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