Login
Quick Links
| Latest News |
| Magazine |
| Downloads |
| Newsletter |
| Bushmoot |
| Resource Links |
| Forums |
| Events |
| Competition |
| Partners |
Partners
| Bushcraft Ventures |
| Bushcraft Expeditions |
| Greenman Bushcraft |
| Wildside Survival |
| Woodcraft School |
| Woodsmoke |
Site Blogs
| Write New Blog |
| View My Blogs |
| View All Blogs |
| View Bloggers |
| Fungi to fight 'toxic war zones' |
|
|
| Wednesday, 07 May 2008 | |||
|
Fungi could help clean up toxic war zones, scientists at a Scottish university have discovered. Dundee University researchers have found evidence that fungi can "lock" depleted uranium into a mineral form. This would make it more difficult for the heavy metal - used in armour-piercing shells - to find its way into plants, animals or the water supply. The fungal-produced minerals are capable of long-term uranium retention, the scientists say. Prof Geoffrey Gadd, from the university's College of Life Sciences, said: "This work provides yet another example of the incredible properties of micro-organisms in effecting transformations of metals and minerals in the natural environment.
"Because fungi are perfectly suited as biogeochemical agents - often they dominate the biota in polluted soils, and play a major role in the establishment and survival of plants through their association with roots - fungal-based approaches should not be neglected in our attempts to deal with metal-polluted soils." The testing of depleted uranium ammunition and its recent use in Iraq and the Balkans had led to contamination of the environment with the unstable metal, said Prof Gadd, who heads the Division of Molecular and Environmental Biology at Dundee. Depleted uranium differs from natural uranium. It is the by-product of uranium enrichment for use in nuclear reactors or nuclear weapons and is valued for its very high density. Although less radioactive than natural uranium, depleted uranium is just as toxic and poses a threat to people. In the new study, the researchers found that free-living and plant fungi can colonise depleted uranium surfaces and transform the metal into uranyl phosphate minerals. Professor Gadd said that while they likely still posed some threat, "the fungal-produced minerals are capable of long-term uranium retention, so this may help prevent uptake of uranium by plants, animals and microbes. It might also prevent the spent uranium from leaching out from the soil." The research, published in the journal Current Biology, concludes that the discovery could lead to uranium-polluted soils eventually being brought back into use.
Comments
(0)
You must be logged in to a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.
|
|||
All News
| environmental stewardship - Good job (12.05.2008) |
| Great tits cope well with warming (12.05.2008) |
| Fungi to fight 'toxic war zones' (07.05.2008) |
| Off-roaders banned on ancient lanes (06.05.2008) |
| Turning Fungus Into Fuel (06.05.2008) |
| Exploring Woodland (03.05.2008) |
| Artificial Photosynthesis (29.04.2008) |
| Ray Mears Times interview (28.04.2008) |
| Mutant black squirrels invade Britain (26.04.2008) |
| Grey squirrel 'may have hitched' (25.04.2008) |
| The value of a tree? (24.04.2008) |
| UK butterflies 'need good summer' (24.04.2008) |
| First ever National Beanpole week (17.04.2008) |
| Oldest Living Tree Found in Sweden (15.04.2008) |
| Moose back on the loose (15.04.2008) |
| Serious Food issues (14.04.2008) |
| Patrolling the squirrel frontline (11.04.2008) |
| Big boost for youth volunteering (11.04.2008) |
| The summer is to be warm ... and wet (11.04.2008) |
| Canada to create giant new northern national park (11.04.2008) |
| Disease may hit half of UK horse chestnut trees (11.04.2008) |
| Minister plans pilot badger cull (09.04.2008) |
| Rare seahorses breeding in Thames (08.04.2008) |
| Global temperatures 'to decrease' (04.04.2008) |
| What house-builders can learn from igloos (04.04.2008) |
| Britain not yet prepared for climate change impacts (02.04.2008) |
| Water water every where... (13.03.2008) |
| Moth's that harm humans (13.03.2008) |
| Save our Green areas (07.03.2008) |
| Wolf debate (04.03.2008) |
| The last of David Attenborough? (03.03.2008) |
| Enjoy life while you can (03.03.2008) |
| Why Juniper Trees Can Live On Less Water (03.03.2008) |
| No case for a badger cull says RSPCA (28.02.2008) |
| Back in time - Nettles for clothing again! (28.02.2008) |
| Limited Badger cull backed by report (27.02.2008) |
| Svalbard's cold store - saving the food supply (26.02.2008) |
| Hunting ban sparks a rural boom (26.02.2008) |
| National park expansion on hold (20.02.2008) |
| Pupils get shooting lessons (20.02.2008) |
| Secret lives of badgers revealed (14.02.2008) |
| Winter camping teaches survival (13.02.2008) |
| We need our Bees (12.02.2008) |
| Charge your phone on the move (11.02.2008) |
| Salmon - Warning about sickness (11.02.2008) |
| Britain's heathland habitat (09.02.2008) |
| Spring is here already? (07.02.2008) |
| Videophilia - Bad for the people (07.02.2008) |
| Greenland rising... (09.11.2007) |

