New article here.
In the last
couple of centuries humans have done a strange thing: we’ve dug the biggest
pits, the deepest holes, and the longest tunnels the world has ever seen, all
to find the most insidious and subtle poisons known to our mammalian bodies, remove
them from deep inside rocks where they had lain sequestered for eons, and concentrate
them in the places where most of us live. We’re starting to think this maybe
wasn’t a good idea.
Take lead, which
last- century humans put into containers, car parts, pipes, paints and many
other products -- and even in petroleum, spreading lead-tainted exhaust across
a world. Lead causes brain damage and erratic behaviour if absorbed into the
human body, and its rise and fall correlates with the US crime rate in the 20th
century – the more lead was around children, the more crime appeared a
generation later. It’s been banned from paints and auto fuel, of course, but it
lingers on old buildings and in soil.
Or take
mercury: burning coal releases it into air and water, and thence into animals
like fish – a 2009 study by the US
Geological Survey tested 300 streams across the USA and found that every fish tested
contained mercury, a quarter at unsafe levels.
You could go
on with a list of such heavy metals – cadmium, zinc, copper – right down the
periodic table. Most of all, we have pulled out coal and oil and used it not
just to fuel up the car and turn on the lights, but to generate hundreds of
thousands of petrochemicals with unpronounceable names as long as sentences and
often-unpleasant effects.
I say “we,”
of course, but this isn’t a guilt trip; most of this was before your time, and
you didn’t vote for it anyway. You and I use small amounts of heavy metals and
fossil fuels in our own lives – driving, flying, heating, buying plastic
products, just looking at this on a computer – but it’s very difficult to avoid
doing so and still living in the modern world.
The
consequence of so many people doing so many of these things, though, is that
any urban area --- and many rural ones – will have splotches on the map with large
quantities of toxic materials in the ground. If you live where a gasoline
station used to be, or a factory, a garbage dump, or any number of other
things, you might have things in your soil you don’t want in your stroganoff.
If you think
you just won’t live in places, or just move away from them, congratulations:
you’re thinking the same thing as everyone else. That presents a problem, as everyone
who can live somewhere else will do so, and everyone who can’t live somewhere
else will live on contaminated sites. Realistically, this means the poor, the
elderly and other vulnerable people have to live with everyone else’s toxic
waste – which is often the case already.
Other
methods, like removing tonnes of contaminated soil, involve years of work and
vast sums of money we don’t have anymore. If you could remove all the affected
soil, moreover, where would you put it, aside from somewhere else that would
then be contaminated?
What we need
is a device that can suck toxins out of the soil and either turn them into
something harmless, or concentrate them in something lightweight and removable.
No one has much money lying around to invent such a device, though, much less
to manufacture millions of them and send them to sites around the world for
free. Thus, these hypothetical devices would be even better if they already
appeared around the world, or were lightweight and easily transportable.
It would be
best, in fact, if these machines cost nothing to create, and once created could
make more of themselves, at an exponential rate. While we’re at it, it would also
be nice if the devices also prevented soil erosion, fed bees and other
pollinators, and provided shade, beauty, a home for wildlife, and possibly
firewood.
Thankfully,
we have these machines now. Certain plants, it turns out, have a particular
gift for sucking up specific chemicals, either as a quirk of their biology or
as a way to make themselves poisonous and avoid being eaten. When these plants
are sown on contaminated ground, they absorb the contaminants into their
tissues, gradually reducing the amount in the soil until it is safe for humans.
Called
phyto-remediation, this process has become one of the newest and most promising
fields of biology. Similar methods use mushrooms in what is called
myco-remediation, or use bacteria and have unfortunate names like bio-sparging,
bio-slurping and bio-venting, but we’ll restrict ourselves here to plants.
The basic
method is straightforward: find out what toxins lurk in your patch of ground,
and come up with a regimen of plants appropriate for the climate that
hyper-accumulate those particular toxins.
“Toxins,” of
course, covers a lot of ground, and the vagueness of the word allows it to be
used in all kinds of unproductive ways – for example, every fake New Age cure
that claims to rid your body of unspecified “toxins.” So to get more specific,
let’s separate toxins into two of the most common categories: metals and
petrochemicals.
Petrochemicals
generally have familiar atoms like carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, the same things
that make up chocolate sundaes, flower gardens, testosterone, newspaper, and
most of the world around us. Those same elements in different combinations,
however, make common but un-tasty compounds like gasoline, or lethal poisons
like Agent Orange -- it’s all in how many atoms are put together in what
arrangement.
If a plant
can absorb, let’s say, the cancer-causing benzo-pyrene – C20H12, found in coal
tar – with some oxygen (O) and then separate it into C12H22O11 and H2O, the petroleum-based
poison would become sugar water. I’m not saying this is the actual chemical
process, by the way – just an example of how chemical combinations can make
something deadly or delicious.
When the
toxins are metals, of course, they cannot be broken down into other elements
any more than lead could be changed to gold. Some plants can absorb the metal
and metabolise it into some kind of molecule, however, making it less easy to
be absorbed by the human body and thus safer to be around. Sometimes the metals
can even help us; some biologists have even proposed using certain edible
plants to accumulate zinc from contaminated soils and feeding the plants to
people with a zinc deficiency.
After the
plants are harvested with the metals concentrated in their tissues, they can be
burned, and the metal stays in the ash – a small amount of space and weight to
dispose of, compared to the tonnes of contaminated earth. The ash might even be
able to be mined for the metals, for complete recycling.
One example
comes from Brazil, where abandoned gold mines are leaking mercury and other
heavy metals into the soil and water. Mercury is one of the most toxic of heavy
metals, and once in the soil it is soaked up by grass, which is eaten by cows,
which are eaten by … you get the idea. Farmers are now growing maize and canola
plants in the area, though, which soak up heavy metals quite nicely – gold as
well as mercury. One scientists overseeing the project estimated farmers could
get a kilogram of gold per hectare from doing this, which would help pay for
the clean-up.
Mustard
greens were used to remove 45% of the excess lead from a yard in Boston to
ensure the safety of children who play there. Pumpkin vines were used to clean
up an old Magic Marker factory site in Trenton, New Jersey, while Alpine
pennycress helped clean up abandoned mines in Britain. Hydroponically grown
sunflowers were used to absorb radioactive metals near the Chernobyl nuclear
site in the Ukraine as well as a uranium plant in Ohio.
Blue Sheep
fescue helps clean up lead, as do water ferns and members of the cabbage
family. Smooth water hyssop takes up copper and mercury, while water hyacinths
suck up mercury, lead, cadmium, zinc, cesium, strontium-90, uranium and various
pesticides. Sunflowers slurp a wide range of compounds – not just the uranium
and strontium-90 from radioactive sites, but also cesium, methyl bromide and
many more. Bladder campion accumulates zinc and copper, while Indian mustard
greens concentrate selenium, sulphur, lead, chromium, cadmium, nickel, zinc,
and copper.
Perhaps the
most magnificent hyperaccumulator, though, is the simple willow tree, Salix
viminalis; it slurps up copper, zinc, cadmium, selenium, silver, chromium,
uranium, petrochemicals and many others. Also, once its bio-mass has
concentrated the heavy metals, it can be harvested and used for many practical
things.
Of course, phytoremediation
operates under certain limitations; the plants have to be able to grow in that
climate, and should not be an invasive species that will take over the
landscape, as kudzu did in the American South. The plants can only remove
toxins as deep as their roots, so the technique might not solve groundwater
contamination.
Most
importantly, plants move at a different speed than we do, and even after the
plants are harvested they are not likely to have eliminated the toxin. Reducing
a toxin to safe levels takes time, and phytoremediation doesn’t remove a
problem overnight.
Perhaps the most
appealing aspect of this new field, though, is its scale, that the work to
clean up toxic-waste sites could be done with no massive government project or
corporate funding, with no bulldozers or construction equipment, without
advanced and delicate technology beyond that to measure the toxin levels. The principles
could be taught to every schoolchild or practiced by every land-owner, so that
if anyone detects a certain toxin on their property, they will know what to plant
to gradually remove it. The seeds and plants could be sold by any gardening or
farm-supply store, so that some of our society’s most grandiose mistakes can be
fixed by ordinary people, using natural means, using home-made experiments,
hard work and patience, to restore our land to what it once was.
Thanks to Dr. David Leung of the
University of Canterbury, New Zealand for his assistance in checking this
article.
Survey
of US streams: “Mercury Found in Every Fish Tested, Scientists Say,” New York
Times, August 19, 2009.
Effects
of lead on crime: “America's Real Criminal Element: Lead,” Mother Jones
magazine, January 2013
Effects
of lead on crime: “How Lead Exposure Relates to Temporal Changes in IQ, Violent
Crime, and Unwed Pregnancy,” Rick Nevin, Environmental Research, Volume 83,
Issue 1, May 2000, Pages 1-22.
Effects
of lead on crime: “Hazards of heavy metal contamination,” British Medical
Bulletin, Volume 68, Issue 1, p. 167-182
Phytoremedation:
Recent Advances Toward Improved Phytoremediation of Heavy Metal Pollution,
Bentham Books, 2013.
Gold
mines and mercury: Phytoremediation of Mercury-Contaminated Mine Wastes, Fabio
Netto Moreno, Massey
University 2004.
Playground
in Boston: “New Jersey company cultivates pollution-eating plants Mustard
greens, alfalfa help to clean up ravages of industry,” Baltimore Sun, March 30.
1997.
Playground
in Boston: Blaylock, M.J., S. Dushenkov, D. Page, G. Montes, D. Vasudev, and Y.
Kapulnik. Phytoremediation of a Pb-contaminated brownfield site in New
Jersey. (1996), pp. 497-498. In Emerging Technologies in Hazardous Waste
Management VIII, 1996 Extended Abstracts for the Special Symposium, Birmingham,
Alabama, Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Division, American Chemical
Society, September 9-11, 1996.
Blue
Sheep Fescue: Phytoremediation: A Green Technology to Remove Environmental
Pollutants, p. 71 – 86, American Journal of Climate Change 2013.
“Metal
armour protects plants from disease,” Planet Earth Online, 10 September 2010.
“Improving
Plants for Zinc Acquisition,” Prachy Dixit and Susan Eapen, Bioremediation Technology: Recent Advances, M. H. Fulekar, Springer, 2010.
Bio-remediation
and Bio-fortification: Two Sides of One Coin, by X. Yin and L. Yuan, Springer
2012.
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