About this Research Topic
For the efficient monitoring of pollution, eco-friendly, low-cost, sustainable, and highly accurate methods are needed. A possible approach that could fulfill all these criteria is using plants for pollution biomonitoring, as they act as pollution integrators over long periods. Polluted sites need to be cleaned and restored, and if possible, the useful elements should be recovered from these sites. Different plant species were found to be suitable for all these processes, yet there are no ready-to-use methods or standardized approaches available. This Research Topic intends to gather different research that could shed light on the recent developments in biomonitoring, bioremediation and biomining to overcome the knowledge gap necessary to upscale the results of promising lab scale or field studies, as well as to highlight the associated challenges and opportunities.
This Research Topic aims to explore the use of different plant species to biomonitor environmental pollution, recover valuable elements from the environment and bioremediate the environment.
We welcome manuscripts dealing with, but not limited to:
- Advances in the use of plants in biomonitoring of environmental pollution
- Mechanisms involved in and factors that influence the environment to plant transfer of pollutants
- Development in the use of plants in biomining
- Recovery of economically valuable elements from plants
- Challenges in developing easy-to-use, cost-effective bioremediation methods
Keywords: plant biomonitoring, plant bioremediation, plant biomining, pollution
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.