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Bioresource Technology | 2010

Phytoremediation potential of Arundo donax in arsenic-contaminated synthetic wastewater

Nosheen Mirza; Qaisar Mahmood; Arshid Pervez; Raza Ahmad; Robina Farooq; Mohammad Maroof Shah; Muhammad Rashid Azim

The present study reports the potential of Arundo donax for phytoextraction of arsenic from synthetic wastewater. A. donax plants were grown under greenhouse conditions in pots containing a nutrient solution amended with increasing doses of As (0, 50, 100, 300, 600 and 1000 microg L(-1)) for 21 days in a completely randomized design. Shoot and roots dry matter production, growth parameters, arsenic and nutrient tissue concentrations were measured at the end of the experiment. Increasing As concentration in nutrient solution caused an increase in shoot and root biomass without toxicity symptoms in A. donax growing under a range of As concentration from 50 to 600 microg L(-1). Elevated oxidative stress was observed at As supplied level of 1000 microg L(-1). The As doses up to 600 microg L(-1) did not affect the growth of A. donax. It is suggested that A. donax plants may be employed to treat contaminated waters containing arsenic concentrations up to 600 microg L(-1).


The Scientific World Journal | 2014

Plants as Useful Vectors to Reduce Environmental Toxic Arsenic Content

Nosheen Mirza; Qaisar Mahmood; Mohammad Maroof Shah; Arshid Pervez; Sikander Sultan

Arsenic (As) toxicity in soil and water is an increasing menace around the globe. Its concentration both in soil and environment is due to natural and anthropogenic activities. Rising arsenic concentrations in groundwater is alarming due to the health risks to plants, animals, and human beings. Anthropogenic As contamination of soil may result from mining, milling, and smelting of copper, lead, zinc sulfide ores, hide tanning waste, dyes, chemical weapons, electroplating, gas exhaust, application of municipal sludge on land, combustion of fossil fuels, As additives to livestock feed, coal fly ash, and use of arsenical pesticides in agricultural sector. Phytoremediation can be viewed as biological, solar-driven, pump-and-treat system with an extensive, self-extending uptake network (the root system) that enhances the natural ecosystems for subsequent productive use. The present review presents recent scientific developments regarding phytoremediation of arsenic contaminated environments and its possible detoxification mechanisms in plants.


Toxicological & Environmental Chemistry | 2015

Antimony (Sb) – pollution and removal techniques – critical assessment of technologies

Hussani Mubarak; Liyuan Chai; Nosheen Mirza; Zhihui Yang; Arshid Pervez; Madiha Tariq; Shahida Shaheen; Qaisar Mahmood

In view of increasing emissions of antimony (Sb) into the environment due to industrialization and consequent carcinogenicity, it is essential to remove this metal from the ecosystem. Antimony and arsenic (As) are analogs. Although numerous studies examined arsenic removal, few reports are available on Sb removal. In this review, various Sb removal techniques are described to understand how this process occurs and what research gaps are needed to improve efficiency. At present, surface adsorption technique is the most widely used for Sb removal. Biological treatment namely phytoremediation is also a promising method and more investigations are required in this regard. The selection of a suitable technique for a given area depends on the conditions including economic, environmental, and social conditions.


Toxicological & Environmental Chemistry | 2017

Constitutional tolerance and chlorophyll fluorescence of Boehmeria nivea L in response to the antimony (Sb) and arsenic (As) co-contamination

Nosheen Mirza; Hussani Mubarak; Liyuan Chai; Zhihui Yang; Qaisar Mahmood; Wang Yong; Chongjian Tang; Shah Fahad; Wajid Nasim

ABSTRACT The metal tolerance and metabolic changes in Boehmeria nivea colonized in mining areas are not well known. A hydroponic experiment was conducted to evaluate the impact of antimony (Sb)+arsenic (As) in following combinations (control (no metal), 20+0, 10+10, 40+0, 20+20, and 40+40 mg/L) on phytotoxicity, metal tolerance index (MTI), and chlorophyll fluorescence in B. nivea. This constitutes an initial investigation of metal tolerance and chlorophyll fluorescence in Sb and Sb+As contaminated B. nivea. The high Sb+As 40+40 mg/L produced significant phytotoxicity and MTI in the plant. Progressive higher Sb and Sb+As levels resulted in decreased chlorophyll fluorescence of B. nivea. Exposure to intermediate and high Sb+As levels induced damage in the photosynthesis apparatus of the plant.


BioMed Research International | 2016

Biochemical and Metabolic Changes in Arsenic Contaminated Boehmeria nivea L.

Hussani Mubarak; Nosheen Mirza; Liyuan Chai; Zhihui Yang; Wang Yong; Chongjian Tang; Qaisar Mahmood; Arshid Pervez; Umar Farooq; Shah Fahad; Wajid Nasim; Kadambot H. M. Siddique

Arsenic (As) is identified by the EPA as the third highest toxic inorganic contaminant. Almost every 9th or 10th human in more than 70 countries including mainland China is affected by As. Arsenic along with other toxins not only affects human life but also creates alarming situations such as the deterioration of farm lands and desertion of industrial/mining lands. Researchers and administrators have agreed to opt for phytoremediation of As over costly cleanups. Boehmeria nivea L. can soak up various heavy metals, such as Sb, Cd, Pb, and Zn. But the effect of As pollution on the biology and metabolism of B. nivea has been somewhat overlooked. This study attempts to evaluate the extent of As resistance, chlorophyll content, and metabolic changes in As-polluted (5, 10, 15, and 20 mg L−1 As) B. nivea in hydroponics. Toxic effects of As in the form of inhibited growth were apparent at the highest level of added As. The significant changes in the chlorophyll, electrolyte leakage, and H2O2, significant increases in As in plant parts, catalase (CAT), and malondialdehyde (MDA), with applied As revealed the potential of B. nivea for As decontamination. By employing the metabolic machinery of B. nivea, As was sustainably removed from the contaminated areas.


Archive | 2015

Phytoremediation Using Algae and Macrophytes: I

Qaisar Mahmood; Nosheen Mirza; Shahida Shaheen

Heavy metals are the global environmental contaminants. Their toxicity of various heavy metals to living systems is well established. The most common treatment processes used include chemical precipitation, oxidation/reduction, ion exchange, reverse osmosis, and solvent extraction. Biological methods of metal removal employ various microbes or plant species and are cost-effective as compared to physicochemical methods. Biosorption has become known as a potential and cost-effective alternative for heavy metal exclusion from aqueous solution. Agricultural by-products have also offered a potential alternative as biosorbents for heavy metals among the existing techniques and are yet a subject of broad studies. Agricultural biosorbents including soybean hulls, peanut hulls, almond hulls, cottonseed hulls, and corncobs have also been proven to take out heavy metal ions. The inspiration of using plants for environmental remediation is very ancient and cannot be traced to any meticulous source. In the course of progressively mesmerizing scientific innovations, pooled with interdisciplinary explorations, phytoremediation is considered to be environmentally friendly technology. Various plant species have shown variable potential for metal uptake. As a plant-based technology, the success of phytoextraction is inherently dependent on several plant characteristics, the two most important being the ability to accumulate large quantities of biomass rapidly and the capacity to accumulate large quantities of environmentally important metals in the shoot tissue. The mechanism of metal uptake, translocation, role of rhizosphere in metal uptake, and possibility of using algae in phytoremediation were reviewed.


Transactions of Nonferrous Metals Society of China | 2017

Physiological characteristics of Ficus tikoua under antimony stress

Liyuan Chai; Yong Wang; Zhihui Yang; Hussani Mubarak; Nosheen Mirza

Abstract A greenhouse culture experiment was used to evaluate the effects of antimony (Sb) stress on Ficus tikoua (F. tikoua). The results showed that the growth of F. tikoua leaves was significantly inhibited when Sb concentration was higher than 30 μmol/L, and no significantly inhibitory effect of Sb on the roots and stems of F. tikoua was found in all the treatments, implying that leaves were more sensitive to Sb toxicity than roots and stems. Antimony concentration in the roots was higher than that in the stems and leaves. To reduce reactive oxygen species (ROS) level in the F. tikoua, the activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD), peroxidase (POD) and catalase (CAT) increased with Sb treatments, but the SOD and CAT were more early active than POD. Although the decrease of chlorophyll content with high Sb treatments (450 μmol/L) was observed at the end of the experiments, the positive impact on chlorophyll content was observed with all the Sb treatments at the early period. No significant difference of the maximum quantum efficiency of PSII and quantum yield of PSII electron transport values with different Sb treatments was observed at the end of this experiment, suggesting that the photosynthesis was not inhibited with Sb concentration below 450 μmol/L. The results implied a certain tolerance to Sb stress for F. tikoua. This meets the essential condition for utilization in Sb contamination environments.


Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences | 2018

Insect pollinator diversity in four forested ecosystems of southern Punjab, Pakistan

Muhammad Amjad Bashir; Shafqat Saeed; Asif Sajjad; Khalid Ali Khan; Hamed A. Ghramh; Muhammad Ahmed Shehzad; Hussani Mubarak; Nosheen Mirza; Shahzadi Mahpara; Muhammad Ishaq Asif Rehmani; Mohammad Javed Ansari

This study investigated pollinator assemblage diversity and richness in four forested ecosystems of southern Punjab, Pakistan, with different landscape types. Pirowal is situated in the plains of irrigated Punjab, Lal Suhanra is part of a sandy desert ecosystem, Ghazi Ghat is part of the Indus River delta, and Fort Munro is located in dry hilly mountains. A yearlong survey of pollinator populations was carried out in these four forested ecosystems from January to December of 2010. Fortnightly hand netting was performed for collecting flower-visiting insects whereas, pan traps of three colors (white, blue, and yellow) were deployed for collecting the data. A total of 8,812 individuals from two orders (Lepidoptera and Diptera) were observed, including 22 families and 154 species. Bees were the most abundant, with 4,502 individuals, and the most species-rich taxa, with 70 species in five families, followed by flies having 2,509 individuals and 51species in 10 families. Wasps were the least abundant with 1,801 individuals and 33 species in seven families. The assemblage structure of pollinator communities as visualized through rank abundance curves showed that there were many species with low abundance and only a few species with a much higher abundance. The most abundant species among the bees, in order, were Nomia sp.3, Megachile bicolor, and Colletes sp.3; among flies, Syrphus sp.2, Calliphoridae sp.1, and Empididae sp.4; and among wasps, Tiphiidae sp.1, Myzininae sp.2, and Scelionidae sp.1.


Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2017

The Potential Use of Vetiveria zizanioides for the Phytoremediation of Antimony, Arsenic and Their Co-Contamination

Nosheen Mirza; Hussani Mubarak; Liyuan Chai; Wang Yong; Muhammad Jamil Khan; Qudrat Ullah Khan; Muhammad Zaffar Hashmi; Umar Farooq; Rizwana Sarwar; Zhihui Yang

Antimony (Sb) and arsenic (As) contaminations are the well reported and alarming issues of various contaminated smelting and mining sites all over the world, especially in China. The present hydroponic study was to assess the capacity of Vetiveria zizanioides for Sb, As and their interactive accumulations. The novelty of the present research is this that the potential of V. zizanioides for Sb and As alone and their interactive accumulation are unaddressed. This is the first report about the interactive co-accumulation of Sb and As in V. zizanioides. Highest applied Sb and As contaminations significantly inhibited the plant growth. Applied Sb and As alone significantly increased their concentrations in the roots/shoot of V. zizanioides. While co-contamination of Sb and As steadily increased their concentrations, in the plant. The co-contamination of Sb and As revealed a positive correlation between the two, as they supplemented the uptake and accumulation of each other. The overall translocation (TF) and bioaccumulation factors (BF) of Sb in V. zizanioides, were 0.75 and 4. While the TF and BF of As in V. zizanioides, were 0.86 and 10. V. zizanioides proved as an effective choice for the phytoremediation and ecosystem restoration of Sb and As contaminated areas.


International Journal of Phytoremediation | 2016

Phytoextraction of HG by parsley (Petroselinum crispum) and its growth responses.

Asma Bibi; Umar Farooq; Sadia Naz; Afsar Khan; Sara Khan; Rizwana Sarwar; Qaisar Mahmood; Arif Alam; Nosheen Mirza

ABSTRACT The effect of mercury (Hg) on the growth and survival of parsley (Petroselinum crispum) was explored at various treatments. The plants were grown in pots having Hoaglands solution to which various Hg treatments were applied and placed under greenhouse conditions. The treatments were: no metal applied (control) and six doses of Hg as mercuric chloride for 15 days. Linear trend of Hg accumulation was noted in roots, stems, and leaves with increasing Hg treatments. The maximum Hg concentration in root, stem and leaf was 8.92, 8.27, and 7.88 at Hg treatments of 25 mg l–1, respectively. On the whole, Hg accumulation in different plant parts was in the following order: leaves > stem > roots. Linear trend was also observed for Bioaccumulation Factor (BF) and Translocation Factor (TF) with increasing Hg concentrations in the growth medium. The highest respective BFHg and TFHg values were 9.32 and 2.02 for the Hg treatments of 25 and 50 mg l–1. In spite of the reduced growth in the presence of Hg, the plant has phytoremediation potential. It is recommended that parsley should not be cultivated in Hg contaminated sites in order to avoid dietary toxicity.

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Qaisar Mahmood

COMSATS Institute of Information Technology

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Arshid Pervez

COMSATS Institute of Information Technology

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Liyuan Chai

Central South University

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Zhihui Yang

Central South University

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Mohammad Maroof Shah

COMSATS Institute of Information Technology

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Wajid Nasim

COMSATS Institute of Information Technology

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Muhammad Zaffar Hashmi

COMSATS Institute of Information Technology

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Shahida Shaheen

COMSATS Institute of Information Technology

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Wang Yong

Central South University

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