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Efficacy of Vermiremediation to Remove Contaminants from Soil

BACKGROUND. In addition to improving soil fertility and crop production, earthworms have been found to be useful in the removal of contaminants from soil, known as vermiremediation. Previous studies on vermiremediation have focused primarily on organic wastes, with relatively less attention paid to...

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Autores principales: Dada, Ebenezer Olasunkanmi, Akinola, Modupe Olatunde, Owa, Stephen Olugbemiga, Dedeke, Gabriel Adewunmi, Aladesida, Adeyinka A., Owagboriaye, Folarin O., Oludipe, Emmanuel O.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Black Smith Institute 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8009642/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33815900
http://dx.doi.org/10.5696/2156-9614-11.29.210302
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author Dada, Ebenezer Olasunkanmi
Akinola, Modupe Olatunde
Owa, Stephen Olugbemiga
Dedeke, Gabriel Adewunmi
Aladesida, Adeyinka A.
Owagboriaye, Folarin O.
Oludipe, Emmanuel O.
author_facet Dada, Ebenezer Olasunkanmi
Akinola, Modupe Olatunde
Owa, Stephen Olugbemiga
Dedeke, Gabriel Adewunmi
Aladesida, Adeyinka A.
Owagboriaye, Folarin O.
Oludipe, Emmanuel O.
author_sort Dada, Ebenezer Olasunkanmi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND. In addition to improving soil fertility and crop production, earthworms have been found to be useful in the removal of contaminants from soil, known as vermiremediation. Previous studies on vermiremediation have focused primarily on organic wastes, with relatively less attention paid to inorganic contaminants. In addition, some basic terms used in environmental health studies have often not been properly clarified. OBJECTIVES. The present study is a review of the state of the literature on the effectiveness of using earthworms to remediate organic and inorganic (metal) soil contaminants. Earthworms’ actions in remediation of organic and inorganic contaminants are described. Some terms that are used interchangeably in environmental health are clarified. The challenges and limitations of vermiremediation are highlighted. METHODS. A systematic literature search was conducted to access online academic publications indexed in Google Scholar, PubMed, Scopus, Clarivate Analytics (Web of Science), ScienceDirect, ResearchGate and Springer Link. A total of 165 publications on the subject matter were accessed, out of which 47 were used for the review. DISCUSSION. Empirical and theoretical information from the literature showed evidence of the significant contributions of earthworms to the removal of soil organic contaminants and metals. Earthworms indirectly facilitate the conversion of organic contaminants by promoting microbial and enzyme activities. Some organic contaminants are directly taken up through dermal and intestinal absorption and accumulated by preferential sequestration in sub-organismic and tissue fractions of earthworms. Metals are directly removed and accumulated by the mechanism of detoxification and sequestration, via metallothioneins induction. The terms ‘contaminants’ and ‘pollutants’ have different meanings and should not be used interchangeably. Although vermiremediation presents an ideal clean-up technique, it is limited in application to only mildly contaminated soil environments. Ethical concerns should not pose a serious issue because vermiremediation simply takes advantage of earthworms’ natural soil-conditioning abilities. Many vermiremediation processes, especially of organic wastes, are harmless to earthworms, improving the soil for their growth and survival. CONCLUSIONS. Vermiremediation presents a good long-term biological option to clean up mildly contaminated soil. It may be deployed as a secondary measure to rid the soil of residual contaminants after applying physicochemical remediation techniques to an overtly polluted soil environment. COMPETING INTERESTS. The authors declare no competing financial interests.
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spelling pubmed-80096422021-04-01 Efficacy of Vermiremediation to Remove Contaminants from Soil Dada, Ebenezer Olasunkanmi Akinola, Modupe Olatunde Owa, Stephen Olugbemiga Dedeke, Gabriel Adewunmi Aladesida, Adeyinka A. Owagboriaye, Folarin O. Oludipe, Emmanuel O. J Health Pollut Review BACKGROUND. In addition to improving soil fertility and crop production, earthworms have been found to be useful in the removal of contaminants from soil, known as vermiremediation. Previous studies on vermiremediation have focused primarily on organic wastes, with relatively less attention paid to inorganic contaminants. In addition, some basic terms used in environmental health studies have often not been properly clarified. OBJECTIVES. The present study is a review of the state of the literature on the effectiveness of using earthworms to remediate organic and inorganic (metal) soil contaminants. Earthworms’ actions in remediation of organic and inorganic contaminants are described. Some terms that are used interchangeably in environmental health are clarified. The challenges and limitations of vermiremediation are highlighted. METHODS. A systematic literature search was conducted to access online academic publications indexed in Google Scholar, PubMed, Scopus, Clarivate Analytics (Web of Science), ScienceDirect, ResearchGate and Springer Link. A total of 165 publications on the subject matter were accessed, out of which 47 were used for the review. DISCUSSION. Empirical and theoretical information from the literature showed evidence of the significant contributions of earthworms to the removal of soil organic contaminants and metals. Earthworms indirectly facilitate the conversion of organic contaminants by promoting microbial and enzyme activities. Some organic contaminants are directly taken up through dermal and intestinal absorption and accumulated by preferential sequestration in sub-organismic and tissue fractions of earthworms. Metals are directly removed and accumulated by the mechanism of detoxification and sequestration, via metallothioneins induction. The terms ‘contaminants’ and ‘pollutants’ have different meanings and should not be used interchangeably. Although vermiremediation presents an ideal clean-up technique, it is limited in application to only mildly contaminated soil environments. Ethical concerns should not pose a serious issue because vermiremediation simply takes advantage of earthworms’ natural soil-conditioning abilities. Many vermiremediation processes, especially of organic wastes, are harmless to earthworms, improving the soil for their growth and survival. CONCLUSIONS. Vermiremediation presents a good long-term biological option to clean up mildly contaminated soil. It may be deployed as a secondary measure to rid the soil of residual contaminants after applying physicochemical remediation techniques to an overtly polluted soil environment. COMPETING INTERESTS. The authors declare no competing financial interests. Black Smith Institute 2021-02-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8009642/ /pubmed/33815900 http://dx.doi.org/10.5696/2156-9614-11.29.210302 Text en © Pure Earth 2021 This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Dada, Ebenezer Olasunkanmi
Akinola, Modupe Olatunde
Owa, Stephen Olugbemiga
Dedeke, Gabriel Adewunmi
Aladesida, Adeyinka A.
Owagboriaye, Folarin O.
Oludipe, Emmanuel O.
Efficacy of Vermiremediation to Remove Contaminants from Soil
title Efficacy of Vermiremediation to Remove Contaminants from Soil
title_full Efficacy of Vermiremediation to Remove Contaminants from Soil
title_fullStr Efficacy of Vermiremediation to Remove Contaminants from Soil
title_full_unstemmed Efficacy of Vermiremediation to Remove Contaminants from Soil
title_short Efficacy of Vermiremediation to Remove Contaminants from Soil
title_sort efficacy of vermiremediation to remove contaminants from soil
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8009642/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33815900
http://dx.doi.org/10.5696/2156-9614-11.29.210302
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