Ecological and Health Risk of Soils, Sediments, and Water Contamination

Soils, sediments, and water require careful stewardship for the planet’s security to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SGDs) set from the United Nations. However, the contamination of these natural resources can damage ecological and human health, and thus we need a comprehensive approach t...

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Main Author: Zeng-Yei Hseu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/10/2867
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spelling doaj-045057d3b2bf48f08e9af57fd0d6ad3c2020-11-25T02:41:57ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412020-10-01122867286710.3390/w12102867Ecological and Health Risk of Soils, Sediments, and Water ContaminationZeng-Yei Hseu0Department of Agricultural Chemistry, National Taiwan University, Taipei 10617, TaiwanSoils, sediments, and water require careful stewardship for the planet’s security to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SGDs) set from the United Nations. However, the contamination of these natural resources can damage ecological and human health, and thus we need a comprehensive approach to provide a remediation reference for the SDGs. The aim of this Special Issue (SI) was to gather the papers emphasizing different aspects and findings of the contamination processes, remediation techniques, and risk assessment of soils, sediments, and water. The Guest-Editor of this SI collected seven papers dealing with biochar application for the reduction in soil nutrient leaching by Kuo et al. and for the immobilization of soil cadmium by Chen et al. Their works contributed to not only sustain soil functions but also to prevent sediments and water from contamination. Moreover, in situ stabilization by environmentally compatible approach is a green remediation of sediments such as thin-layer capping for freshwater and estuary sediments by Ou et al. and Ch’ng et al., respectively. Bioassays including microbiological response and enzyme activities were used to test water quality by Martín et al. and Aljahdali et al., in addition to the finding of antibiotic-degrading bacterial strains reported by Yang et al. in sewage sludge. These papers may aid to update and incorporate new views and discussion for the SDGs.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/10/2867bioaccessibilitybiocharbiomarkersgreen and sustainable remediationheavy metalSDGs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zeng-Yei Hseu
spellingShingle Zeng-Yei Hseu
Ecological and Health Risk of Soils, Sediments, and Water Contamination
Water
bioaccessibility
biochar
biomarkers
green and sustainable remediation
heavy metal
SDGs
author_facet Zeng-Yei Hseu
author_sort Zeng-Yei Hseu
title Ecological and Health Risk of Soils, Sediments, and Water Contamination
title_short Ecological and Health Risk of Soils, Sediments, and Water Contamination
title_full Ecological and Health Risk of Soils, Sediments, and Water Contamination
title_fullStr Ecological and Health Risk of Soils, Sediments, and Water Contamination
title_full_unstemmed Ecological and Health Risk of Soils, Sediments, and Water Contamination
title_sort ecological and health risk of soils, sediments, and water contamination
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Soils, sediments, and water require careful stewardship for the planet’s security to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SGDs) set from the United Nations. However, the contamination of these natural resources can damage ecological and human health, and thus we need a comprehensive approach to provide a remediation reference for the SDGs. The aim of this Special Issue (SI) was to gather the papers emphasizing different aspects and findings of the contamination processes, remediation techniques, and risk assessment of soils, sediments, and water. The Guest-Editor of this SI collected seven papers dealing with biochar application for the reduction in soil nutrient leaching by Kuo et al. and for the immobilization of soil cadmium by Chen et al. Their works contributed to not only sustain soil functions but also to prevent sediments and water from contamination. Moreover, in situ stabilization by environmentally compatible approach is a green remediation of sediments such as thin-layer capping for freshwater and estuary sediments by Ou et al. and Ch’ng et al., respectively. Bioassays including microbiological response and enzyme activities were used to test water quality by Martín et al. and Aljahdali et al., in addition to the finding of antibiotic-degrading bacterial strains reported by Yang et al. in sewage sludge. These papers may aid to update and incorporate new views and discussion for the SDGs.
topic bioaccessibility
biochar
biomarkers
green and sustainable remediation
heavy metal
SDGs
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/10/2867
work_keys_str_mv AT zengyeihseu ecologicalandhealthriskofsoilssedimentsandwatercontamination
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