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  2. Bioremediation: Factors, Types, Advantages, Disadvantages

    microbenotes.com/bioremediation-types-factors

    Bioremediation includes a series of redox reactions for the production of energy within microbial cells for cell maintenance and reproduction. Bioremediation is a global, regional and local application for removing pollutants from the environment restoring the contaminated sites.

  3. Bioremediation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioremediation

    Bioremediation can be used to mineralize organic pollutants, to partially transform the pollutants, or alter their mobility. Heavy metals and radionuclides generally cannot be biodegraded, but can be bio-transformed to less mobile forms.

  4. A Citizen's Guide to Bioremediation - U.S. Environmental...

    www.epa.gov/.../files/2015-04/documents/a_citizens_guide_to_bioremediation.pdf

    Bioremediation is the use of microbes to clean up contaminated soil and groundwater. Microbes are very small organisms, such as bacteria, that live naturally in the environment. Bioremediation stimulates the growth of certain microbes that use contaminants as a source of food and energy.

  5. Community Guide to Bioremediation - US EPA

    semspub.epa.gov/work/HQ/401583.pdf

    Bioremediation. What Is Bioremediation? Bioremediation is the use of microbes to clean up contaminated soil and groundwater. Microbes are very small organisms, such as bacteria, that live naturally in the environment. Bioremediation stimulates the growth of certain microbes that use contaminants as a source of food and energy. Contaminants treated

  6. Bioremediation - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

    www.sciencedirect.com/topics/agricultural-and-biological-sciences/bioremediation

    Bioremediation is a process used to treat contaminated water, soil, and subsurface material by stimulating microbial growth to degrade the target pollutants. Bioremediation is regarded as an ecofriendly and inexpensive process.

  7. Recent Strategies for Bioremediation of Emerging Pollutants: A...

    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9413587

    Bioremediation is an effective cleaning technique for removing toxic waste from polluted environments that is gaining popularity. Various microorganisms, including aerobes and anaerobes, are used in bioremediation to treat contaminated sites.

  8. Bioremediation: An Overview on Current Practices, Advances, and...

    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5687126

    Bioremediation, a branch of environmental biotechnology, is nowadays considered as one of the most promising alternatives. This technology uses the amazing ability of microorganisms or plants to accumulate, detoxify, degrade, or remove environmental contaminants.

  9. 22.5C: Prokaryotes and Environmental Bioremediation

    bio.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Introductory_and_General_Biology/General_Biology...

    Key Terms. bioremediation: the use of biological organisms, usually microorganisms, to remove contaminants, especially from soil or polluted water. biotransformation: the changes (both chemical and physical) that occur to a substance (especially a drug) by the actions of enzymes within an organism.

  10. 6.4: Bioremediation - Biology LibreTexts

    bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Hartnell_College/Environmental_Biology_(Fisher_and...

    Bioremediation is a waste management technique that involves the use of organisms such as plants, bacteria, and fungi to remove or neutralize pollutants from a contaminated site.

  11. Concept and types of bioremediation - ScienceDirect

    www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780128193822000016

    Bioremediation is a natural process, which relies on bacteria, fungi, and plants to remove, reduce, degrade, or immobilize environmental pollutants from soil and water, thus restoring contaminated sites to a relatively clean nontoxic environment (Kamaludeen et al., 2003; Khalid et al., 2017).