Ferns Remove Arsenic from Soil and Water
Ferns Remove Arsenic from Soil and Water
Last Updated (Thursday, 02 July 2009 12:17) Written by Deb St. George Friday, 10 April 2009 00:00
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AgriTrax.com Bruce Ferguson, CEO of Edenspace, a Virginia-based company that now licenses the patent for the ferns and sells them commercially under the name “edenfern". The fronds of Pteris vittata, or brake fern, can be clipped or the entire plant can be dug up and disposed of safely. In the United States they are now using ferns in
programs to remove arsenic from soil and drinking water. In Albuquerque,
New Mexico, the ferns significantly decreased the level of arsenic
in samples of the city drinking water. Some plants are able to live
without soil, in the water. About 100 ferns were placed in trays up a
staircase and then 450 gallons of water were pumped through the system
daily. Scientists are genetically modifying these plants to remove
environmental toxins. "Current methods to rid dirt of these poisons run
about $1 million per acre-foot of earth (the volume of a foot-deep acre
of soil). Using plants to do the same job, on the other hand, costs
about $3,000." The ferns are now grown year round in Florida, and can be
purchase online for $4.95 a piece, not including shipping. The company recently made the ferns available
royalty free to parts of the developing world, according to Ferguson. |




