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Good Morning Everyone...
I have joined Guru Gobind Singh Inderprastha University as research scholar. I am going through literature review for different areas .. finding my real research interest and the related possible working things. Currently reading some interesting research possibilities for pollution mitigation through the help of nature (plants). if anyone having some related material for the same,..please mail me at simpyenv02@gmail.com. Thank you :)

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The Use of Aquatic Plants to Treat Waste Water....

http://fourthcornernurseries.com/articles/frers.html

http://oldsite.waterrecycling.com/Aqplants.htm

if you have more queries, let us discuss....but I am also new into the aquatic water treatment

thank you for the related information,..but i am looking for the terrestrial plants and their pollution mitigating phenomenon. if something can found through which methods we employ and test them ?

have a good day !

Arsenic as a food chain contaminant: mechanisms of plant uptake and metabolism and mitigation strategies.

Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.
Annual Review of Plant Biology (Impact Factor: 18.71). 01/2010; 61:535-59. DOI:10.1146/annurev-arplant-042809-112152
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Arsenic (As) is an environmental and food chain contaminant. Excessive accumulation of As, particularly inorganic arsenic (As(i)), in rice (Oryza sativa) poses a potential health risk to populations with high rice consumption. Rice is efficient at As accumulation owing to flooded paddy cultivation that leads to arsenite mobilization, and the inadvertent yet efficient uptake of arsenite through the silicon transport pathway. Iron, phosphorus, sulfur, and silicon interact strongly with As during its route from soil to plants. Plants take up arsenate through the phosphate transporters, and arsenite and undissociated methylated As species through the nodulin 26-like intrinsic (NIP) aquaporin channels. Arsenate is readily reduced to arsenite in planta, which is detoxified by complexation with thiol-rich peptides such as phytochelatins and/or vacuolar sequestration. A range of mitigation methods, from agronomic measures and plant breeding to genetic modification, may be employed to reduce As uptake by food crops.

.............. I dont have the full paper. If you get it, pls share

thank you sir, for the information. i got the whole paper, and attached ae well.



Rakesh KN said:

Arsenic as a food chain contaminant: mechanisms of plant uptake and metabolism and mitigation strategies.

Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.
Annual Review of Plant Biology (Impact Factor: 18.71). 01/2010; 61:535-59. DOI:10.1146/annurev-arplant-042809-112152
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Arsenic (As) is an environmental and food chain contaminant. Excessive accumulation of As, particularly inorganic arsenic (As(i)), in rice (Oryza sativa) poses a potential health risk to populations with high rice consumption. Rice is efficient at As accumulation owing to flooded paddy cultivation that leads to arsenite mobilization, and the inadvertent yet efficient uptake of arsenite through the silicon transport pathway. Iron, phosphorus, sulfur, and silicon interact strongly with As during its route from soil to plants. Plants take up arsenate through the phosphate transporters, and arsenite and undissociated methylated As species through the nodulin 26-like intrinsic (NIP) aquaporin channels. Arsenate is readily reduced to arsenite in planta, which is detoxified by complexation with thiol-rich peptides such as phytochelatins and/or vacuolar sequestration. A range of mitigation methods, from agronomic measures and plant breeding to genetic modification, may be employed to reduce As uptake by food crops.

.............. I dont have the full paper. If you get it, pls share

Attachments:

Good Morning Everyone,

I am keenly looking for the information regaind techinique for Scanning Electron Microscopy for plant surfaces,..its principle, varoius cell strures observation etc.

thankyou 

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