环境修复
环境化学
生物量(生态学)
污染物
环境科学
污染
流出物
水生生态系统
微生物
金属
生化工程
化学
生态学
环境工程
生物
遗传学
有机化学
细菌
工程类
作者
Cristina M. Monteiro,Paula M. L. Castro,F. Xavier Malcata
摘要
Abstract Metal contamination of a few aquatic, atmospheric, and soil ecosystems has increased ever since the industrial revolution, owing to discharge of such elements via the effluents of some industrial facilities. Their presence to excessive levels in the environment will eventually lead to serious health problems in higher animals owing to accumulation throughout the food web. Current physicochemical methods available for recovery of metal pollutants (e.g., chemical precipitation, oxidation/reduction, or physical ion exchange) are either expensive or inefficient when they are present at very low concentrations. Consequently, removal of toxic metals by microorganisms has emerged as a potentially more economical alternative. Microalgae (in terms of both living and nonliving biomass) are an example of microorganisms suitable to recover metals and able to attain noteworthy percent removals. Their relatively high metal‐binding capacities arise from the intrinsic composition of their cell walls, which contain negatively charged functional groups. Consequently, microalgal cells are particularly efficient in uptake of those contaminants when at low levels. Self‐defense mechanisms developed by microalgal cells to survive in metal‐containing media and environmental factors that affect their removal (e.g., pH, temperature, and biomass concentration) are reviewed here in a comprehensive way and further discussed in attempts to rationalize this form of remediation vis‐a‐vis with conventional nonbiological alternatives. © 2012 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2012
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