Phytomonitoring and Phytoremediation of Environmental Pollutants
A special issue of Plants (ISSN 2223-7747). This special issue belongs to the section "Plant Ecology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2023) | Viewed by 30810
Special Issue Editors
Interests: phytoremediation; plant biomonitoring; plant response to abiotic stress; plant biodiversity along environmental gradients
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: biomonitoring of air quality; bioaccumulation of pollutants; plant-environment interactions
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Phytomonitoring and phytoremediation are two aspects related to the intrinsic properties of plants. These organisms are indeed sessile beings; therefore, they cannot escape environmental injuries. As a consequence, plants can display signs of sensitivity or tolerance to environmental pollutants, linked to their ability to develop proper mechanisms to cope with environmental stress. Environmental pollution is one of the most pressing problems worldwide, particularly in densely populated and industrialized areas. Persistent pollutants, such as heavy metals, PAHs, dioxins, and microplastics accumulate in the environment as a consequence of natural and anthropogenic activities, contaminating air, water bodies, sediments and soil. These contaminants pass from the abiotic component of ecosystems to the biotic one, along the food chain, up to humans, causing serious damage to both environmental and human health.
Therefore, the extensive monitoring and the cleaning of environmental compartments from pollutants represent crucial challenges to minimizing the hazard to the ecosystems. As for photo monitoring, alongside widely consolidated approaches, few data exist on the potential of plants as biomonitors of microplastics, leaving a relevant knowledge gap in the scientific literature. Further, the effects of less studied stressors on plants (e.g, physical stress, ionizing radiations,…) deserve in-depth dedicated investigations and analyses. Regarding remediation of polluted soil, physical and chemical methods are generally expensive, and their application returns soils devoid of their original biological properties, sometimes producing new wastes. The use of plants and associated microbiota in restoring polluted soils, water bodies and sediments are effective and eco-friendly restoration methods. They are receiving increasing attention from researchers and stakeholders, also raising public awareness of environmental protection as an important value for life quality.
The aim of this Special Issue is to welcome all those original studies focused on algae, cryptogams and vascular plants as biomonitors and restorers of environmental pollutants.
Prof. Dr. Valeria Spagnuolo
Prof. Dr. Simonetta Giordano
Dr. Maria Cristina Cristina Sorrentino
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- plant bioindicators
- plant bioaccumulators
- plants and abiotic stress
- organic and inorganic pollutants
- plants and radiations
- microplastics
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