U.S. EPA Contaminated Site Cleanup Information (CLU-IN)


U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
U.S. EPA's Technology Innovation Program

Phytotechnologies

Overview

Phytotechnology is broadly defined as the use of vegetation to address contaminants in soil, sediment, surface water, and groundwater. Cleanup objectives for phytotechnologies can be contaminant removal and destruction, control and containment, or both. Phytoremediation (i.e., contaminant removal and destruction) is a phytotechnology subset (ITRC 2009). A layman's discussion of plant-based remediation can be found in A Citizen's Guide to PhytoremediationAdobe PDF Logo, which is also available in a Spanish translationAdobe PDF Logo.

While phytotechnologies generally are applied in situ, ex situ applications (e.g., hydroponics systems) are possible. Typical organic contaminants, such as petroleum hydrocarbons, gas condensates, crude oil, chlorinated compounds, pesticides, and explosive compounds, can be addressed using plant-based methods. Phytotechnologies also can be applied to typical inorganic contaminants, such as heavy metals, metalloids, radioactive materials, and salts (ITRC 2009).

Six major plant mechanisms enable phytotechnologies to remove, destroy, transfer, stabilize, or contain contaminants:

  • Phytoextraction
  • Phytodegradation
  • Phytovolatilization
  • Rhizodegradation
  • Phytosequestration
  • Phytohydraulics

Additional information specific to uses of plants for soil and groundwater cleanup, and constructed wetlands is available in the Federal Remediation Technologies Roundtable's Remediation Technologies Screening Matrix and Reference Guide.


Adobe PDF LogoITRC (Interstate Technology & Regulatory Council). 2009. Phytotechnology
Technical and Regulatory Guidance and Decision Trees, Revised
. Phyto-3

Adobe PDF LogoUSEPA. 2006. In Situ Treatment Technologies for Contaminated Soil: Engineering Forum Issue Paper. EPA 542-F-06-013.

 

Adobe PDF LogoIntroduction to Phytoremediation
EPA 600-R-99-107, 2000

This introduction is designed to help site regulators, owners, neighbors, and managers to evaluate the applicability of phytoremediation to a site. This document is a compilation of research and remediation work that defines terms and provides a framework to understand phytoremediation applications. See also the 2001 summaryAdobe PDF Logo of this report.

Phytoremediation
D. Tsao (ed.).
Springer, New York. ISBN: 978-3-540-43385-9, 206 pp, 2003

This volume contains discussions of soil/plant microbe interactions in phytoremediation, a field assessment of the effect of plants on petroleum degradation in soil, phyoextraction of heavy metals from soil, hydraulic control of groundwater using deep-rooted tree systems, and vegetative covers for waste containment. Table of Contents

Phytoremediation: Transformation and Control of Contaminants
S.C. McCutcheon and J.L. Schnoor.
J. Wiley, New York. ISBN: 9780471273042, 987 pp, 2003

This comprehensive book details phytoremediation at all levels, from basic molecular and biochemical processes to practical considerations in field applications. The first of 7 sections contains detailed descriptions of all fields of phytoremediation and their state of development. Plant/contaminant interactions are discussed in the Section 2, covering mechanisms by which contaminants are degraded, plant tolerance, root architecture, and determination of tree water use. Sections 3, 4, and 5 present the degradation mechanisms, volatilization, and hydraulic control of different contaminant classes. Section 6 covers practical aspects of implementing phytotechnology. Section 7 outlines some of the latest advances of phytoremediation with discussions of atmospheric pollutants, MTBE, cyanide, and perchlorate. The text also describes plant and microbe database tools that can be used to assist selection of suitable organisms and offers case studies of phytoremediation in the field. Table of Contents

Phytotechnology Project Profiles Database

Over 165 projects encompassing international, completed, and ongoing phytotechnology applications have been found in the literature and documented in this database. Each profile contains information about relevant site background, the types of contaminants treated, type of vegetation used, phytotechnology mechanisms, planting date, project size, location, cost, monitoring and performance results, as well as points of contact and references.

Adobe PDF LogoPhytotechnology Technical and Regulatory Guidance and Decision Trees, Revised
Interstate Technology & Regulatory Council (ITRC) Phytotechnologies Team.
PHYTO-3, 187 pp, 2009

This document is an update to Phytoremediation Decision Tree (PHYTO-1 1999) and Phytotechnology Technical and Regulatory Guidance Document (PHYTO-2 2001) and replaces the previous documents entirely. It merges the concepts of both previous documents and includes new and practical information on the process and protocol for selecting and applying various phytotechnologies as remedial alternatives. The technical descriptions of phytotechnologies in this document concentrate on the functioning mechanisms: phytosequestration, rhizodegradation, phytohydraulics, phytoextraction, phytodegradation, and phytovolatilization. Decision trees (Remedy Selection, Groundwater, Soil/Sediment, and Riparian Zone) help guide the user through the application of phytotechnologies to a remediation project.