Phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill

Metal remediation is important considering the environmental pressure due to soil pollution from landfill leachate. Hence, identifying potential plant-based option for remediation, especially the use of bio-/hyper-accumulators, is inevitable. Contamination of soil with heavy metals has been a decade...

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Main Authors: Barasarathi, Jayanthi, Auwal, Hassan, Pariatamby, Agamuthu, Shahul Hamid, Fauziah, Uche, Emenike Chijioke
Format: Article
Published: Springer Heidelberg 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/42407/
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spelling my.um.eprints.424072023-10-06T08:23:02Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/42407/ Phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill Barasarathi, Jayanthi Auwal, Hassan Pariatamby, Agamuthu Shahul Hamid, Fauziah Uche, Emenike Chijioke Q Science (General) Metal remediation is important considering the environmental pressure due to soil pollution from landfill leachate. Hence, identifying potential plant-based option for remediation, especially the use of bio-/hyper-accumulators, is inevitable. Contamination of soil with heavy metals has been a decades-long concern. This study is therefore aimed to evaluating the metal-remediation potentials of four ornamental plant species-Cordyline fruticosa, Duranta variegated, Tradescantia spathacea, and Chlorophylum comosum-on leachate-contaminated soil. Details of the study involved leachate analysis, soil characterization, and metal-accumulation test on selected plants. Characterization of both landfill soil and leachate has indicated that Pb, Cu, As, Mn, Cr, Zn, Fe, and Ni were higher than the prescribed limits. The high metal reduction efficiency of C. fruticosa on all the studied metals was about 63%, 85%, 77.88%, 77.55%, and 75% for Pb, As, Mn, Zn, and Cr concentrations. The metal removal by the plants was significantly higher as compared to control soil (P < 0.05). The highest removal rate constant witnessed was for Mn (0.023 day(-1)) and was achieved using C. fruticosa. The results have revealed that C. fruticosa was the most promising plant for the removal of the studied metals. Therefore, it can be concluded that C. fruticosa has potentials to remediate heavy metal-contaminated soil at significant level. The findings will develop investigation into plant-tissue and compartmentalization effect on metal remediation using C. fruticosa. Springer Heidelberg 2022-03 Article PeerReviewed Barasarathi, Jayanthi and Auwal, Hassan and Pariatamby, Agamuthu and Shahul Hamid, Fauziah and Uche, Emenike Chijioke (2022) Phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 29 (15). pp. 22069-22081. ISSN 0944-1344, DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-021-17389-3 <https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-021-17389-3>. 10.1007/s11356-021-17389-3
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
Barasarathi, Jayanthi
Auwal, Hassan
Pariatamby, Agamuthu
Shahul Hamid, Fauziah
Uche, Emenike Chijioke
Phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill
description Metal remediation is important considering the environmental pressure due to soil pollution from landfill leachate. Hence, identifying potential plant-based option for remediation, especially the use of bio-/hyper-accumulators, is inevitable. Contamination of soil with heavy metals has been a decades-long concern. This study is therefore aimed to evaluating the metal-remediation potentials of four ornamental plant species-Cordyline fruticosa, Duranta variegated, Tradescantia spathacea, and Chlorophylum comosum-on leachate-contaminated soil. Details of the study involved leachate analysis, soil characterization, and metal-accumulation test on selected plants. Characterization of both landfill soil and leachate has indicated that Pb, Cu, As, Mn, Cr, Zn, Fe, and Ni were higher than the prescribed limits. The high metal reduction efficiency of C. fruticosa on all the studied metals was about 63%, 85%, 77.88%, 77.55%, and 75% for Pb, As, Mn, Zn, and Cr concentrations. The metal removal by the plants was significantly higher as compared to control soil (P < 0.05). The highest removal rate constant witnessed was for Mn (0.023 day(-1)) and was achieved using C. fruticosa. The results have revealed that C. fruticosa was the most promising plant for the removal of the studied metals. Therefore, it can be concluded that C. fruticosa has potentials to remediate heavy metal-contaminated soil at significant level. The findings will develop investigation into plant-tissue and compartmentalization effect on metal remediation using C. fruticosa.
format Article
author Barasarathi, Jayanthi
Auwal, Hassan
Pariatamby, Agamuthu
Shahul Hamid, Fauziah
Uche, Emenike Chijioke
author_facet Barasarathi, Jayanthi
Auwal, Hassan
Pariatamby, Agamuthu
Shahul Hamid, Fauziah
Uche, Emenike Chijioke
author_sort Barasarathi, Jayanthi
title Phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill
title_short Phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill
title_full Phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill
title_fullStr Phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill
title_full_unstemmed Phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill
title_sort phytoremediation of leachate contaminated soil: a biotechnical option for the bioreduction of heavy metals induced pollution in tropical landfill
publisher Springer Heidelberg
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/42407/
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