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Effectiveness of plants and green infrastructure utilization in ambient particulate matter removal.

Katarzyna WróblewskaByoung Ryong Jeong
Published in: Environmental sciences Europe (2021)
Air pollution is regarded as an increasingly threatening, major environmental risk for human health. Seven million deaths are attributed to air pollution each year, 91% of which is due to particulate matter. Vegetation is a xenobiotic means of removing particulate matter. This review presents the mechanisms of PM capture by plants and factors that influence PM reduction in the atmosphere. Vegetation is ubiquitously approved as a PM removal solution in cities, taking various forms of green infrastructure. This review also refers to the effectiveness of plant exploitation in GI: trees, grasslands, green roofs, living walls, water reservoirs, and urban farming. Finally, methods of increasing the PM removal by plants, such as species selection, biodiversity increase, PAH-degrading phyllospheric endophytes, transgenic plants and microorganisms, are presented.
Keyphrases
  • particulate matter
  • air pollution
  • human health
  • climate change
  • lung function
  • risk assessment
  • randomized controlled trial
  • systematic review
  • chronic obstructive pulmonary disease