Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Degradation of plant cell wall polymers
- 2 The biochemistry of ligninolytic fungi
- 3 Bioremediation potential of white rot fungi
- 4 Fungal remediation of soils contaminated with persistent organic pollutants
- 5 Formulation of fungi for in situ bioremediation
- 6 Fungal biodegradation of chlorinated monoaromatics and BTEX compounds
- 7 Bioremediation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons by ligninolytic and non-ligninolytic fungi
- 8 Pesticide degradation
- 9 Degradation of energetic compounds by fungi
- 10 Use of wood-rotting fungi for the decolorization of dyes and industrial effluents
- 11 The roles of fungi in agricultural waste conversion
- 12 Cyanide biodegradation by fungi
- 13 Metal transformations
- 14 Heterotrophic leaching
- 15 Fungal metal biosorption
- 16 The potential for utilizing mycorrhizal associations in soil bioremediation
- 17 Mycorrhizas and hydrocarbons
- Index
17 - Mycorrhizas and hydrocarbons
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Degradation of plant cell wall polymers
- 2 The biochemistry of ligninolytic fungi
- 3 Bioremediation potential of white rot fungi
- 4 Fungal remediation of soils contaminated with persistent organic pollutants
- 5 Formulation of fungi for in situ bioremediation
- 6 Fungal biodegradation of chlorinated monoaromatics and BTEX compounds
- 7 Bioremediation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons by ligninolytic and non-ligninolytic fungi
- 8 Pesticide degradation
- 9 Degradation of energetic compounds by fungi
- 10 Use of wood-rotting fungi for the decolorization of dyes and industrial effluents
- 11 The roles of fungi in agricultural waste conversion
- 12 Cyanide biodegradation by fungi
- 13 Metal transformations
- 14 Heterotrophic leaching
- 15 Fungal metal biosorption
- 16 The potential for utilizing mycorrhizal associations in soil bioremediation
- 17 Mycorrhizas and hydrocarbons
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Knowledge of plant-microorganism interactions is of great importance for bioremediation and phytoremediation. A wide variety of microbial populations live in natural and agricultural soils, and in marginal soils contaminated with xenobiotics. Plant roots strongly influence the surrounding environment, producing the so-called ‘rhizosphere effect’ in which microbial populations are qualitatively and quantitatively altered with, reciprocally, their metabolism directly affecting plant biology and the accompanying biota.
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) belong to the wide spectrum of soil microbiota and are able to improve the growth of the host plant, particularly in soils of low nutritional status or in those modified by human activity. This positive effect can be ascribed to the improvement of nutrient uptake by mycorrhizal colonized plant roots and the increase of soil volume explored for nutrient uptake by the plant, extending from areas in which nutrients have been exhausted to new regions where they are still available. An understanding of the interactions of arbuscular and vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizas, together with the remaining soil microorganisms naturally associated with plant roots, will provide the basis for development of an important biotechnological tool for bioremediation.
Bioremediation is a managed or spontaneous process in which biological, especially microbiological, catalysis acts on pollutant compounds, thereby reducing or eliminating environmental contamination (Madsen, 1991).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Fungi in Bioremediation , pp. 456 - 471Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001
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