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Ch. 27 - Environmental Microbiology
Tortora - Microbiology: An Introduction 14th Edition
Tortora14th EditionMicrobiology: An IntroductionISBN: 9780138200398Not the one you use?Change textbook
Chapter 27, Problem 9

Bioremediation refers to the use of living organisms to remove pollutants. Describe three examples of bioremediation.

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Understand that bioremediation is the process of using living organisms, such as bacteria, fungi, or plants, to degrade or remove environmental pollutants, making contaminated sites cleaner and safer.
Identify the first example: using bacteria to break down oil spills in marine environments. Certain bacteria can metabolize hydrocarbons found in oil, effectively reducing pollution in oceans.
Identify the second example: employing fungi to degrade complex organic pollutants like pesticides or industrial chemicals in soil. Fungi have enzymes capable of breaking down tough compounds that bacteria might not handle well.
Identify the third example: using plants in a process called phytoremediation, where plants absorb heavy metals or other toxins from contaminated soil or water, thereby cleaning the environment.
Summarize that these examples illustrate different types of organisms and mechanisms involved in bioremediation, highlighting its versatility in addressing various pollutants.

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Key Concepts

Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.

Bioremediation

Bioremediation is the process of using living organisms, such as bacteria, fungi, or plants, to degrade or remove environmental pollutants. It is an eco-friendly and cost-effective method to clean contaminated soil, water, or air by transforming harmful substances into less toxic forms.
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Microbial Degradation

Microbial degradation involves bacteria or fungi breaking down complex pollutants like oil spills or pesticides into simpler, non-toxic compounds. These microorganisms use pollutants as energy sources, facilitating natural cleanup processes in contaminated environments.
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Phytoremediation

Phytoremediation uses plants to absorb, accumulate, or detoxify pollutants from soil or water. Certain plants can extract heavy metals or organic contaminants, making this method useful for restoring polluted sites while enhancing soil quality and preventing erosion.