Oman Daily Observer

L DECEMBER 4

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A GROUP of US engineers has developed two types of transgenic grass species that can eliminate toxic compounds widely used in explosives which contaminat­e the air around military bases and battlegrou­nds. Explosives and munitions leave behind toxic compounds that have contaminat­ed millions of acres of US military bases — with an estimated clean-up bill ranging between $16 billion and $165 billion, according to a paper published in Plant Biotechnol­ogy Journal.

The University of Washington ( UW) and the University of York researcher­s introduced two genes from bacteria that learned to eat RDX and break it down into harmless components in two perennial grass species: switchgras­s (Panicum virgatum) and creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifer­a).

The best-performing grass strains removed all the RDX from a simulated soil in which they were grown within less than two weeks and they retained none of the toxic chemical in their leaves or stems.

“This is a sustainabl­e and affordable way to remove and destroy pollutant on these training ranges,” said Stuart Strand, senior author and UW Professor of civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g.

“The grasses could be planted on the training ranges, grow on their own and require little to no maintenanc­e. When a toxic particle from the munitions lands in a target area, their roots would take up the RDX and degrade it before it can reach groundwate­r,” Strand added.

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