PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Biochar from invasive weed shields rice from toxic nanoplastics and heavy metals

2025-10-07
(Press-News.org) A team of scientists has found that biochar made from an aggressive invasive plant can protect rice from two modern pollutants that threaten global food security: nanoplastics and cadmium. The study, published in Biochar, reveals how biochar biofilters derived from Mikania micrantha, an invasive vine spreading across Asia, can reduce the combined toxicity of these contaminants by regulating plant metabolism and strengthening rice’s natural defense systems.

Nanoplastics, the tiny fragments of degraded plastics, and cadmium, a persistent heavy metal, frequently coexist in agricultural soils and water. Their combined effects are more harmful than either pollutant alone, disrupting photosynthesis, root growth, and cellular structures in crops. In the new research, rice plants exposed to both pollutants suffered a 16 percent loss in biomass. However, when grown with the Mikania biochar biofilter, biomass increased by more than 80 percent, and chlorophyll and protein levels were significantly restored.

Microscopic imaging showed that nanoplastics were able to penetrate rice roots under cadmium stress, acting as carriers that transported the metal deep into plant tissues. The biochar biofilter formed a physical and chemical barrier, trapping the pollutants and reducing their movement within the plant. The biochar also enhanced the rice’s antioxidant activity and gene expression related to stress defense, helping maintain healthier root and leaf cell structures.

Further biochemical and metabolomic analyses revealed that biochar-treated plants had better nutrient balance and more stable energy cycles, including improved nitrogen transport and tricarboxylic acid (TCA) pathways. In contrast, nanoplastics interfered with hormone signaling and ATP-binding transporters, intensifying cadmium uptake and toxicity.

The findings point to an innovative, sustainable strategy for mitigating pollution in farmlands. Using an invasive weed to produce biochar not only converts ecological waste into a useful soil amendment but also offers a low-cost solution for protecting crops from emerging contaminants. The researchers say the dual benefit, controlling an invasive species while improving soil and plant health, could be valuable for cleaner and safer food production systems.

The study underscores the potential of biochar biofilters as a green technology to combat the intertwined challenges of plastic pollution, heavy metal contamination, and invasive plant management in agriculture.

 

=== 

Journal Reference: Rana, M.S., Ren, R., Imran, M. et al. Mitigating combined internalized toxicity of nanoplastics and cadmium in rice through metabolic and biochemical regulations under supply of biochar biofilters derived from Mikania Micrantha. Biochar 7, 98 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s42773-025-00488-6  

 

=== 

About Biochar

Biochar is the first journal dedicated exclusively to biochar research, spanning agronomy, environmental science, and materials science. It publishes original studies on biochar production, processing, and applications—such as bioenergy, environmental remediation, soil enhancement, climate mitigation, water treatment, and sustainability analysis. The journal serves as an innovative and professional platform for global researchers to share advances in this rapidly expanding field. 

Follow us on Facebook, X, and Bluesky. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Rice University announces second cohort of Chevron Energy Graduate Fellows

2025-10-07
Rice University has named 10 graduate students as recipients of the 2025-26 Chevron Energy Graduate Fellowships, a program created through a partnership between the Rice Sustainability Institute and Chevron. Each fellow receives a $10,000 award to support research advancing scalable energy innovations that reduce emissions, accelerate low-carbon technologies and improve the reliability and efficiency of current and future energy systems. The fellowship program, launched last year, reflects a shared commitment ...

Soil bacteria and minerals form a natural “battery” that breaks down antibiotics in the dark

2025-10-07
Researchers have unveiled a surprising new way that soil microbes can use sunlight energy — even after the lights go out. A team from Kunming University of Science and Technology and the University of Massachusetts Amherst has developed a “bio-photovoltage soil-microbe battery” that can capture, store, and release solar energy to power the breakdown of antibiotic pollutants in the dark. The study, published in Environmental and Biogeochemical Processes, shows that common soil bacteria known as Bacillus megaterium can partner with iron minerals to form a living biofilm that behaves like a rechargeable geochemical capacitor. When exposed to light, the iron-bacteria film ...

Jamestown colonists brought donkeys, not just horses, to North America, old bones reveal

2025-10-07
A new study published in Science Advances about centuries-old horse and donkey bones, unearthed in Jamestown, Virginia, is rewriting the story of how these animals first arrived in North America. While written records from the earliest English explorers show that horses were among the animals brought to Virginia, the new zooarchaeological analysis of animal remains found at Jamestown is the first to show that colonists also brought donkeys to the New World. The study also reveals a dark ending to these equids in the colony: The horses and donkeys were likely butchered and eaten during Jamestown’s infamous winter of starvation. “There ...

FIU cybersecurity researchers develop midflight defense against drone hijacking

2025-10-07
MIAMI (Oct. 7, 2025) – As drones become increasingly common in U.S. skies – delivering packages, inspecting bridges, even monitoring crops – the danger of cyberattacks has grown too. A drone hijacked by hackers could suddenly veer off course, speed up, stall in midair, or crash. Once compromised, the machine is useless, often left as little more than expensive junk. Florida International University researchers have found a way to fight back. At the IEEE International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks, FIU computer scientists unveiled SHIELD, a defensive system that can detect and neutralize ...

Kennesaw State researcher aims to discover how ideas spread in the digital age

2025-10-07
From viral videos to debates over new products, ideas move faster than ever in today’s digital age. Mehmet Aktas, an associate professor of data science and analytics, is leading National Science Foundation-funded research that looks into how those ideas spread, evolve, and shape communities. Funded through a collaborative NSF grant, Aktas is working with colleagues from Georgia State University and Georgia Gwinnett College to explore new ways of modeling information diffusion. Aktas’s project studies how information flows within networks of people. Traditional approaches treat communication like a chain of one-to-one interactions, ...

Next-generation perovskite solar cells are closer to commercial use

2025-10-07
As renewable energy technologies advance, researchers aim to make solar power more efficient, affordable, and durable. Scientists from Kaunas University of Technology (KTU), Lithuania, in collaboration with international partners, have achieved one of the highest efficiencies ever reported for fully inorganic perovskite solar cells. They have also demonstrated for the first time that these cells can operate stably for hundreds of hours, approaching the reliability of commercial silicon solar cells. “Perovskite solar cells are one of the fastest-growing solar technologies in the world – they can be lightweight, thin-film, and flexible, and most importantly, they are ...

Sleep patterns linked to variation in health, cognition, lifestyle, and brain organization

2025-10-07
Researchers led by Aurore Perrault at Concordia University, Canada and Valeria Kebets at McGill University, Canada, have used a complex data-driven analysis to uncover relationships among multiple aspects of sleep and individual variation in health, cognition, and lifestyle. Published on October 7th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology, the study reveals five sleep-biopsychosocial profiles and their associated patterns of functional connectivity among brain-regions. Most studies of sleep focus on a single aspect, such as duration, and examine how it relates to a ...

University of Oklahoma researcher awarded funding to bridge gap between molecular data and tissue architecture

2025-10-07
NORMAN, Okla. – Marmar Moussa, an assistant professor in the School of Computer Science and Stephenson School of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Oklahoma, has received a distinguished U.S. National Science Foundation CAREER award to develop advanced computational tools that could transform how scientists study disease at the cellular level, particularly in cancer and tissue remodeling. Moussa will lead a five-year project to create advanced algorithms that combine molecular profiling ...

Nationally-recognized pathologist Paul N. Staats, MD, named Chair of Pathology at University of Maryland School of Medicine

2025-10-07
Paul N. Staats, MD, a nationally recognized expert in cytopathology and gynecologic pathology, has been appointed Chair of the University of Maryland School of Medicine’s (UMSOM) Department of Pathology, effective September 29. Paul N. Staats, MD, a nationally recognized expert in cytopathology and gynecologic pathology, has been appointed Chair of the University of Maryland School of Medicine’s (UMSOM) Department of Pathology, effective September 29. He steps into his permanent role overseeing an UMSOM department of 35 faculty, 16 residents, and three fellows, that provides clinical services to University ...

The world’s snow leopards are very similar genetically. That doesn’t bode well for their future

2025-10-07
There are relatively few snow leopards in the world, and it has likely been that way for a long time, a new study indicates. This situation increases their risk of extinction in a changing environment. The Stanford-led research, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found very low genetic diversity among the elusive big cats, who have an estimated population of less than 8,000. They are also highly specialized to their habitat in the arid, mountainous regions of 12 Asian countries, including Russia, Afghanistan, Nepal, and Tibet. “Snow ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Calorie labelling linked to 2% average reduction in energy content of menu items

Widely prescribed opioid painkiller tramadol not that effective for easing chronic pain

Exercise snacks may boost cardiorespiratory fitness of physically inactive adults

15,000 women a year with breast cancer could benefit from whole genome sequencing, say researchers

Study highlights risks of Caesarean births to future pregnancies

GLP-1 agonists pose emerging challenge for PET-CT imaging, study finds

Scripps Research scientists unlock new patterns of protein behavior in cell membranes

Panama Canal may face frequent extreme water lows in coming decades

Flash Joule heating lights up lithium extraction from ores

COMBINEDBrain and MUSC announce partnership to establish biorepository for pediatric cerebrospinal fluid and CNS tissue bank

Questionable lead reporting for drinking water virtually vanished after Flint water crisis, study reveals

Assessing overconfidence among national security officials

Bridging two frontiers: Mitochondria & microbiota, Targeting Extracellular Vesicles 2025 to explore game-changing pathways in medicine

New imaging tech promises to help doctors better diagnose and treat skin cancers

Once dominant, US agricultural exports falter amid trade disputes and rising competition

Biochar from invasive weed shields rice from toxic nanoplastics and heavy metals

Rice University announces second cohort of Chevron Energy Graduate Fellows

Soil bacteria and minerals form a natural “battery” that breaks down antibiotics in the dark

Jamestown colonists brought donkeys, not just horses, to North America, old bones reveal

FIU cybersecurity researchers develop midflight defense against drone hijacking

Kennesaw State researcher aims to discover how ideas spread in the digital age

Next-generation perovskite solar cells are closer to commercial use

Sleep patterns linked to variation in health, cognition, lifestyle, and brain organization

University of Oklahoma researcher awarded funding to bridge gap between molecular data and tissue architecture

Nationally-recognized pathologist Paul N. Staats, MD, named Chair of Pathology at University of Maryland School of Medicine

The world’s snow leopards are very similar genetically. That doesn’t bode well for their future

Researchers find key to stopping deadly infection

Leafcutter ants have blind spots, just like truck drivers

Tayac receives funding for community engagement project

Parker receives funding for Elementary Education Program Professional Development School (PDS)

[Press-News.org] Biochar from invasive weed shields rice from toxic nanoplastics and heavy metals