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Bioremediation for Sustainable Environmental Cleanup
12.1.1 Heavy Metals Pollution in Water and their Impacts
Heavy metals are explained as metals with high atomic weight and high density. Metallic chemicals
and metalloids (selenium, arsenic) are highly toxic to human health, while some are typically non
toxic, like gold and silver (Tchounwou et al. 2012). While toxic metals need to be removed, precious
metals must be essentially recovered from the wastewaters. There are some essential heavy metals
likes Cu, Fe, Mg, Zn, while non-essential heavy metals are Cr, Ni, Pb, As, Hg (Kumar et al. 2020).
Heavy metal accumulation in worldwide rivers and lakes is higher than the permissible limits as per
standards of the WHO (World Health Organization) and has been increasing over the past 4–5 decades
(Zhou et al. 2020). This increased metal pollution is mainly attributed to industrial waste and mining
activities, while the geochemical origin is the natural causal factor (Zeitoun et al. 2014). Chemicals
loaded with heavy metals are used in industries like metal plating, battery production, tanneries,
petroleum refineries and mining; wastewaters from these industries include large amounts of heavy
metals. Metals are mobilized in the environment, where they alter the biogeochemical processes
and bioaccumulate in the food chain (Waldichuk 1994). Plants, animals and microorganisms are all
affected by metal polluted water and soil. Human health is adversely affected because metals tend
to get bioaccumulated in the food chain and human beings occupy higher levels in the food web.
Concentrations of various metals such as Fe, Ni, Cd and Co which are known to have serious health
implications, were found to be exceeding the permissible limits in river Yamuna flowing across the
state of Haryana (Kaushik et al. 2001) and river Ghaggar (Kaushik et al. 2000) and these metals
were mainly related to anthropogenic sources. Table 12.1 shows the health impacts of some non
essential heavy metals and metalloids as reported by researchers.
Table 12.1. Health impacts and sources of non-essential heavy metals.
Heavy metals
Major sources
Health impacts
References
Arsenic
Industrial waste, agricultural runoff, coal
mining, fossil fuel burning, etc.
Psychological effect, decreased mental
performance, cardiovascular disease,
kidney damage, carcinogenesis, effect
on reproduction, bone demineralization
Rehman et al.
2018
Cadmium
Mine drainage water, waste from the
processing of ores, agricultural runoff
Kidney damage, osteoporosis,
cardiovascular disease, cancer, lungs
damage, obesity and diabetes
Fatima et al.
2019
Lead
Paint industry, batteries, unregulated
cosmetics and medicine
Affects brain and nervous system, high
risk of blood pressure, kidney damage,
effects pregnant woman or exposing
the fetus
Demayo et al.
1982, García-
Lestón 2010
Nickel
Batteries, paper industry, fossil fuels,
mining, volcanoes, forest fires
Cardiovascular, kidney damage, lung
fibrosis, lung and nasal cancer and
respiratory manifestations
Genchi et al.
2020
Mercury
Industrial effluents, coal combustion,
battery and fluorescent lamp production,
cement production, Hg mining, and
biofuel burning
Acute chemical bronchitis and
pneumonitis, Minamata disease
Zhang et al.
2007
12.1.2 Metal Remediation Approaches
With increasing awareness about the harmful impacts of various heavy metals on ecosystems and
organisms’ health, there is a greater emphasis on the elimination and retrieval of the metals from
polluted waters and soils by adopting various techniques (physical, chemical, biological) available,
as shown in Figure 12.1.