Monitoring Pesticides in Antimicrobial Resistance Era and Sustainable Agriculture
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Toxicology and Public Health".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 September 2022) | Viewed by 18020
Special Issue Editors
Interests: antimicrobial resistance; environmental fate of pollutants and their health impacts; drug discovery from natural resources; green technology in agroindustry
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: biogeochemistry of pollutants; microbial transformation and ecology in continental hydrosystems; biodegradation of industrial and micropolluants in wetlands, soils and aquifers
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Although the concept of sustainable agriculture through using green technologies to reduce the use of chemical inputs in agriculture is encouraged, it is still hard to avoid using pesticides in promoting the production of commercial crops in climate change conditions. Some pesticides are still permitted to be used and some have high persistence in agroecosystems and consequently cause adverse impacts on environmental health. Numerous studies have also revealed that pesticides are among the xenobiotics that evolve antimicrobial resistance traits in the exposed microbial population. Hence, introducing various biotechnological approaches as alternatives to using pesticides and reducing the use of pesticides should be prioritized. On the other hand, if the use of pesticides is unavoidable, the environmental fate and ecotoxicity of such pesticides should be investigated beforehand, and the precise effective doses and ecological risk assessment require a standard application and recommendation. For the pesticides that are legacy pollutants, advanced knowledge and technology are needed to remediate their polluted environments and recirculate the effective land use for agriculture.
This Special Issue provides a platform to exchange and update our new insights into the link between pesticides and antimicrobial resistance problem, environmental fate, risk assessment and ecotoxicity of pesticides, biotechnological alternatives to reduce the use of pesticides, and transformation of pesticides together with the remediation technologies/approaches for the restoration of the pesticide-polluted environment. All types of articles that fall within the above research areas are welcome.
Dr. Rungroch Sungthong
Dr. Imfeld Gwenael
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- pesticide
- antimicrobial resistance
- environmental fate
- risk assessment
- ecotoxicity
- biocontrol
- sustainable agriculture
- pesticide-polluted environment
- biotransformation
- bioremediation
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