A herb that grows abundantly in coastal areas can be used to rid the soil around nuclear plants of cesium, a radioactive by-product of reactors, says a new study.
Sea purslane or Sesuvium portulacastrum is a salt-tolerant, perennial flowering succulent that grows in sandy coastlines around the world. The study, published October in Advances in Agriculture, described it as a "hyper-accumulator" of cesium and capable of improving soils contaminated by the metal.
"Sesuviumplants rapidly uptake toxic compounds and translocate them to aerial parts such as leaves and stem. That is why we selected the plant for this study," says T. D. Nikam, an author of the study and professor, Department of Botany, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune, India.
The presence of radiocesium and other metal toxicants in soil, water and air can cause serious consequences to human health and the environment, says the study, and one way to deal with it is to use plants for "phytoremediation" of soils.