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Trees Help Clean Up The Air Of Pollutants

by Tanya Thomas on Sep 21 2009 8:41 AM

Researchers at North Carolina (NC) State University, US, are working to demonstrate that through a unique process, trees can be used to remove pollutants from the environment.

Through a process called phytoremediation - literally a "green" technology - plants and trees remove pollutants from the environment or render them harmless.

Phytoremediation uses plants to absorb heavy metals from the soil into their roots.

The process is an attractive alternative to the standard clean-up methods currently used, which are very expensive and energy intensive.

At appropriate sites, phytoremediation can be a cost-effective and sustainable technology, according to Dr. Elizabeth Nichols, environmental technology professor in NC State's Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources.

Through a partnership with state and federal government agencies, the military and industry, Dr. Elizabeth Nichols, and her team are using phytoremediation to clean up a contaminated site in Elizabeth City, NC.

The Coast Guard site was planted with a mixture of fast-growing trees such as hybrid poplars and willows to prevent residual fuel waste from entering the Pasquotank River by ground water discharge.

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About 3,000 trees were planted on the five-acre site, which stored aircraft fuel for the Coast Guard base from 1942 until 1991. Fuels had been released into the soil and ground water over time.

Efforts to recover easily extractable fuel using a free product recovery system - also called "oil skimmers" - had stalled so other remedial options were considered before choosing phytoremediation.

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"We knew that tree growth would be difficult on portions of the site due to the levels of fuels in the soil and ground water, but, overall, we thought the trees could keep this contamination from moving toward the river by slowing ground water flow," Nichols said.

"Trees need water for photosynthesis so they absorb water from the ground; that process can slow the amount of ground water flowing toward the river," he added.

In the process of absorbing water from the ground, trees can take up fuel contaminants.

Some contaminants will be degraded by trees during this process while others will be released into the air by tree leaves and stems.

"We wanted to demonstrate that the trees would first slow the movement of fuel toward the river," Nichols said.

Trees can also increase the abundance and diversity of soil microorganisms around their roots. Some of these soil microorganisms will degrade the fuel still remaining in the ground.

"This can be a slower process, but we also want to show that trees will remove the remaining fuel footprint over time," Nichols said.

Source-ANI
TAN


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