Abstract
Heavy metals are among the major pollutants from anthropogenic inputs that reach mangrove ecosystem by urban and agricultural runoff, industrial effluents, boating, mining and other processes. To minimize the detrimental effects of heavy metal exposure and their accumulations, plants in general have evolved biological detoxification mechanisms, which include avoidance or exclusion, excretion and accumulation. To protect the cellular components from oxidative damage by heavy metal contamination, biological systems have developed enzymatic and non-enzymatic antioxidant mechanisms. Another detoxification mechanisms produced in plants are osmoprotectants, which are the compatible solutes which maintain a favourable water potential gradient and protect cellular structures from toxic ions. Besides these mechanisms, another heavy metal detoxification system in plants involves the chelation of metals by metal binding molecules like metallothioneins (MTs) and phytochelatins (PCs). To limit the heavy metal toxicity from mangrove ecosystem, it was found that phytoremediation is a most useful technology where in plants are used to remove pollutants from the environment and it is considered as a comparatively new, low-cost and highly promising technology for the remediation of heavy metal. Rhizofiltration, phytovolatilization, phytoextraction and phytostabilization are the important phytoremediation techniques. Among these phytoextraction and phytostabilization are found highly important in the case of mangroves and are promising means of phytoremediation.
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