A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, September 4, 2015
Explosive news: Plants can fight back against TNT pollution - researchers
Scientists have discovered why TNT is so toxic to plants and intend to
use this knowledge to tackle the problem of cleaning up the many sites
worldwide contaminated by the commonly used explosive.
Researchers on Thursday said they have pinpointed an enzyme in plants
that reacts with TNT, which is present in the soil at contaminated
sites, and damages plant cells. TNT pollution can devastate vegetation
and leave land desolate.
Conventional breeding techniques could be used to produce plants like
grasses that would lack the enzyme and be more tolerant of TNT, they
said. These could be grown to re-vegetate contaminated land and remove
TNT from the soil.
"Explosives such as TNT are toxic not only to plants but also animals,
microbes and aquatic life," said biotechnology professor Neil Bruce of
Britain's University of York, who led the study in the journal Science.
"Large areas of land are now contaminated by explosives, and there is a
pressing need to find low-cost sustainable solutions to containing these
pollutants and ideally removing these pollutants from contaminated
areas. Plants have the potential to do this if we can alleviate the
toxicity issue."
TNT has been used as an explosive for more than a century. Vast
quantities have been manufactured and used, polluting military live-fire
training ranges, manufacturing waste sites, mines and war zones. It
resists being broken down by microbes and remains in the soil for
decades.
"In the U.S., it is estimated there are about 10 million hectares (24
million acres) of military land contaminated with munitions
constituents, many of which contain TNT," University of York biologist
Liz Rylott said.
TNT lingers in plant roots, inhibiting growth and development.
The researchers, working with a small flowering plant called Arabidopsis
thaliana common in laboratory experiments, found that specimens with a
mutation in a gene called MDHAR6 were able to thrive in TNT-contaminated
soil. Plants lacking the mutation struggled in the same soil.
The gene controls an enzyme that recycles vitamin C in structures called
mitochondria that provide the energy that powers cells. The enzyme
converts TNT to a more toxic compound that damages a plant's cellular
machinery. The plants with the mutation produced a non-functional enzyme
version, short-circuiting TNT toxicity.
The researchers said Arabidopsis is too small and weedy to be useful at
TNT-contaminated sites but plants like switchgrass could be bred for
this trait and introduced within around five years.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)